| Literature DB >> 34972233 |
Michael Merry1, Patricia Jean Riddle1, Jim Warren1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis is commonly used for comparing models and humans; however, the exact analytical techniques vary and some are flawed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34972233 PMCID: PMC9246510 DOI: 10.1055/s-0041-1740565
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Methods Inf Med ISSN: 0026-1270 Impact factor: 1.800
Fig. 1A set of human performances ( purple dots ) with mean sensitivity and specificity ( purple cross ), the convex hull of optimal human performance ( black ), the estimated ROC of human performance ( green ) and a model's ROC ( red ). All ROCs/ROC estimates dominate the mean performance. The model ROC dominates in high-specificity conditions, and has a higher AUC, but is dominated in the range where humans primarily operate. AUC, area under the curve; ROC, receiver operating characteristic.
General model performances and two worked prevalence examples
| General model performance | 17.7% Prevalence assumption | 41.0% Prevalence assumption | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cost-prevalence gradient range | Dominator | (Sensitivity, specificity) range | Cost-gradient range | PPV range | NPV range | Cost-gradient range | PPV range | NPV range |
| 0.00–0.31 | Model A | (1.00, 0.00)–(0.93, 0.60) | 0.00–1.43 | 0.18–0.41 | 1.00–0.97 | 0.00–0.44 | 0.41–0.70 | 1.00–0.91 |
| 0.31–0.50 | Specialist A | (0.93, 0.60)–(0.89, 0.73) | 1.43–2.32 | 0.41–0.54 | 0.97–0.96 | 0.44–0.72 | 0.70–0.79 | 0.91–0.88 |
| 0.50–1.14 | Specialist B | (0.89, 0.73)–(0.83, 0.85) | 2.32–5.31 | 0.54–0.67 | 0.96–0.94 | 0.72–1.64 | 0.79–0.87 | 0.88–0.84 |
| 1.14–4.33 | Specialist C | (0.83, 0.85)–(0.75, 0.92) | 5.31–20.14 | 0.67–0.73 | 0.94–0.92 | 1.64–6.24 | 0.87–0.90 | 0.84–0.78 |
| 4.33–Inf | Model B | (0.75, 0.92)–(0.00, 1.0) | 20.14–Inf | 0.73–1.00 | 0.92–0.82 | 6.24–Inf | 0.90–1.00 | 0.78–0.59 |
Note: Regular reporting would only present the first three columns as all others can be calculated on different assumptions on the basis of the first three.