| Literature DB >> 4629240 |
D J Leaper, J C Horrocks, J R Staniland, F T De Dombal.
Abstract
This paper reports a comparison between two modes of computer-aided diagnosis in a real-time prospective trial involving 472 patients with acute abdominal pain. In the first mode the computer-aided system analysed each of the 472 patients by referring to data previously collated from a large series of 600 real-life patients. In the second mode the system used as a basis for its analysis "estimates" of probability provided by a group of six clinicians. The accuracy and reliability of both modes were compared with the performance of unaided clinicians.Using "real-life" data the computer system was significantly more effective than the unaided clinician. By contrast, when using the clinicians' own estimates the computer-aided system was often less effective than the unaided clinician-especially when diagnosing less common disorders. It seems, firstly, that future systems for computer-aided diagnosis should employ data from real-life and not clinicians' estimates, and, secondly, that clinicians themselves cannot analyse cases in a probabilistic fashion, since often they have little idea of what the "true" probabilities are.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1972 PMID: 4629240 PMCID: PMC1786557 DOI: 10.1136/bmj.4.5836.350
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br Med J ISSN: 0007-1447