Diagnosis of Poisoning Using Probabilistic Logic Networks

Date
2021-01-05
Authors
Chary, Michael
Boyer, Edward
Burns, Michele
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3573
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Abstract
Medical toxicology is the clinical specialty that treats the toxic effects of substances, be it an overdose, a medication error, or a scorpion sting. The volume of toxicological knowledge has, as with other medical specialties, outstripped the ability of the individual clinician to master and stay current with it. The application of machine learning techniques to medical toxicology is challenging because initial treatment decisions are often based on a few pieces of textual data and rely heavily on prior knowledge. Moreover, ML techniques often do not represent knowledge in a way that is transparent for the physician, raising barriers to usability. Rule-based systems and decision tree learning are more transparent approaches, but often generalize poorly and require expert curation to implement and maintain. Here, we construct a probabilistic logic network to represent a portion of the knowledge base of a medical toxicologist. Our approach transparently mimics the knowledge representation and clinical decision-making of practicing clinicians. The software, dubbed \emph{Tak}, performs comparably to humans on straightforward cases and intermediate difficulty cases, but is outperformed by humans on challenging clinical cases. \emph{Tak} outperforms a decision tree classifier at all levels of difficulty. Probabilistic logic provides one form of explainable artificial intelligence that may be more acceptable for use in healthcare, if it can achieve acceptable levels of performance.
Description
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Implementation of Body Sensor Systems in Healthcare Practice, explainable artificial intelligence, healthcare, probabilistic logic networks
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10 pages
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Proceedings of the 54th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences
Table of Contents
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
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