生成式人工智能能否取代疼痛研究中的实地调查?

IF 1.5 Q4 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Scandinavian Journal of Pain Pub Date : 2024-03-07 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1515/sjpain-2023-0136
Suzana Bojic, Nemanja Radovanovic, Milica Radovic, Dusica Stamenkovic
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:生成式人工智能(AI)模型为疼痛研究数据的获取提供了潜在的帮助,但人们对数据的准确性和可靠性仍然存在担忧。在一项比较研究中,我们评估了开放式人工智能生成模型获取攀岩者急性疼痛数据的能力,其结果与实地研究结果相当:我们要求 52 名攀岩者(33 米/19 英尺;年龄 29.0 [24.0-35.75] 岁)报告单次攀岩过程中的疼痛位置和强度。五个生成式预训练变压器模型负责回答相同的问题:结果:登山者认为前臂后部(19.2%)和脚趾(17.3%)是主要疼痛部位,报告的疼痛强度中位数为 4 [3-5],最大疼痛强度中位数为 7 [5-8]。相反,人工智能模型得出了不同的结论,指出手指、手、肩、腿和脚是主要疼痛部位,平均和最大疼痛强度分别为 3 至 4.4 和 5 至 10。只有两个人工智能模型提供的参考文献在PubMed和谷歌搜索中无法找到:我们的研究结果表明,目前开放的人工智能生成模型无法与实地收集的攀岩者急性疼痛数据的质量相媲美。此外,这些模型生成的参考文献并不存在,这让人们对其可靠性产生了担忧。
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Could generative artificial intelligence replace fieldwork in pain research?

Background: Generative artificial intelligence (AI) models offer potential assistance in pain research data acquisition, yet concerns persist regarding data accuracy and reliability. In a comparative study, we evaluated open generative AI models' capacity to acquire data on acute pain in rock climbers comparable to field research.

Methods: Fifty-two rock climbers (33 m/19 f; age 29.0 [24.0-35.75] years) were asked to report pain location and intensity during a single climbing session. Five generative pretrained transformer models were tasked with responses to the same questions.

Results: Climbers identified the back of the forearm (19.2%) and toes (17.3%) as primary pain sites, with reported median pain intensity at 4 [3-5] and median maximum pain intensity at 7 [5-8]. Conversely, AI models yielded divergent findings, indicating fingers, hands, shoulders, legs, and feet as primary pain localizations with average and maximum pain intensity ranging from 3 to 4.4 and 5 to 10, respectively. Only two AI models provided references that were untraceable in PubMed and Google searches.

Conclusion: Our findings reveal that, currently, open generative AI models cannot match the quality of field-collected data on acute pain in rock climbers. Moreover, the models generated nonexistent references, raising concerns about their reliability.

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来源期刊
Scandinavian Journal of Pain
Scandinavian Journal of Pain CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
6.20%
发文量
73
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