Benchmarking Vision Capabilities of Large Language Models in Surgical Examination Questions

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q1 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES Journal of Surgical Education Pub Date : 2025-02-09 DOI:10.1016/j.jsurg.2025.103442
Jean-Paul Bereuter MD , Mark Enrik Geissler MS , Anna Klimova PhD , Robert-Patrick Steiner MD , Kevin Pfeiffer , Fiona R. Kolbinger MD , Isabella C. Wiest MD , Hannah Sophie Muti MD , Jakob Nikolas Kather MD
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective

Recent studies investigated the potential of large language models (LLMs) for clinical decision making and answering exam questions based on text input. Recent developments of LLMs have extended these models with vision capabilities. These image processing LLMs are called vision-language models (VLMs). However, there is limited investigation on the applicability of VLMs and their capabilities of answering exam questions with image content. Therefore, the aim of this study was to examine the performance of publicly accessible LLMs in 2 different surgical question sets consisting of text and image questions.

Design

Original text and image exam questions from 2 different surgical question subsets from the German Medical Licensing Examination (GMLE) and United States Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE) were collected and answered by publicly available LLMs (GPT-4, Claude-3 Sonnet, Gemini-1.5). LLM outputs were benchmarked for their accuracy in answering text and image questions. Additionally, the LLMs’ performance was compared to students’ performance based on their average historical performance (AHP) in these exams. Moreover, variations of LLM performance were analyzed in relation to question difficulty and respective image type.

Results

Overall, all LLMs achieved scores equivalent to passing grades (≥60%) on surgical text questions across both datasets. On image-based questions, only GPT-4 exceeded the score required to pass, significantly outperforming Claude-3 and Gemini-1.5 (GPT: 78% vs. Claude-3: 58% vs. Gemini-1.5: 57.3%; p < 0.001). Additionally, GPT-4 outperformed students on both text (GPT: 83.7% vs. AHP students: 67.8%; p < 0.001) and image questions (GPT: 78% vs. AHP students: 67.4%; p < 0.001).

Conclusion

GPT-4 demonstrated substantial capabilities in answering surgical text and image exam questions. Therefore, it holds considerable potential for the use in surgical decision making and education of students and trainee surgeons.
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来源期刊
Journal of Surgical Education
Journal of Surgical Education EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES-SURGERY
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
10.30%
发文量
261
审稿时长
48 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of Surgical Education (JSE) is dedicated to advancing the field of surgical education through original research. The journal publishes research articles in all surgical disciplines on topics relative to the education of surgical students, residents, and fellows, as well as practicing surgeons. Our readers look to JSE for timely, innovative research findings from the international surgical education community. As the official journal of the Association of Program Directors in Surgery (APDS), JSE publishes the proceedings of the annual APDS meeting held during Surgery Education Week.
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