探索各种临床任务中温度对大型语言模型的影响

Dhavalkumar Patel, Prem Timsina, Ganesh Raut, Robert Freeman, Matthew Levin, Girish Nadkarni, Benjamin S Glicksberg, Eyal Klang
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摘要

大型语言模型(LLM)正成为医疗分析不可或缺的一部分。然而,人们对控制输出随机性的温度超参数在临床任务中的影响仍然知之甚少。本研究评估了不同温度设置对各种临床任务的影响。我们利用西奈山医疗系统的电子健康记录进行了一项回顾性队列研究,收集了 2023 年 1 月至 12 月期间 1283 名患者的随机样本。我们在五种温度设置(0.2、0.4、0.6、0.8、1.0)下测试了三种 LLM(GPT-4、GPT-3.5 和 Llama-3-70b)预测院内死亡率(二元分类)、住院时间(回归)和医疗编码准确性(临床推理)的能力。在预测死亡率方面,所有模型的准确度在不同温度下基本保持稳定。Llama-3 的准确率最高,约为 90%,其次是 GPT-4(80-83%)和 GPT-3.5(74-76%)。预测住院时间的回归分析表明,所有模型在不同温度下的表现一致。在医疗编码任务中,不同温度下的表现也很稳定,其中 GPT-4 的准确率最高,达到了 17% 的完全编码准确率。我们的研究表明,在不同的临床任务中,LLMs 在不同的温度设置下都能保持稳定的准确性,这对 "临床推理需要较低温度 "的假设提出了挑战。
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Exploring Temperature Effects on Large Language Models Across Various Clinical Tasks
Large Language Models (LLMs) are becoming integral to healthcare analytics. However, the influence of the temperature hyperparameter, which controls output randomness, remains poorly understood in clinical tasks. This study evaluates the effects of different temperature settings across various clinical tasks. We conducted a retrospective cohort study using electronic health records from the Mount Sinai Health System, collecting a random sample of 1283 patients from January to December 2023. Three LLMs (GPT-4, GPT-3.5, and Llama-3-70b) were tested at five temperature settings (0.2, 0.4, 0.6, 0.8, 1.0) for their ability to predict in-hospital mortality (binary classification), length of stay (regression), and the accuracy of medical coding (clinical reasoning). For mortality prediction, all models' accuracies were generally stable across different temperatures. Llama-3 showed the highest accuracy, around 90%, followed by GPT-4 (80-83%) and GPT-3.5 (74-76%). Regression analysis for predicting the length of stay showed that all models performed consistently across different temperatures. In the medical coding task, performance was also stable across temperatures, with GPT-4 achieving the highest accuracy at 17% for complete code accuracy. Our study demonstrates that LLMs maintain consistent accuracy across different temperature settings for varied clinical tasks, challenging the assumption that lower temperatures are necessary for clinical reasoning.
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