A Large Language Model Outperforms Other Computational Approaches to the High-Throughput Phenotyping of Physician Notes

Munzir, Syed I., Hier, Daniel B., Oommen, Chelsea, Carrithers, Michael D.

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence 

High-throughput phenotyping, the automated mapping of patient signs and symptoms to standardized ontology concepts, is essential to gaining value from electronic health records (EHR) in the support of precision medicine. Despite technological advances, high-throughput phenotyping remains a challenge. This study compares three computational approaches to high-throughput phenotyping: a Large Language Model (LLM) incorporating generative AI, a Natural Language Processing (NLP) approach utilizing deep learning for span categorization, and a hybrid approach combining word vectors with machine learning. The approach that implemented GPT-4 (a Large Language Model) demonstrated superior performance, suggesting that Large Language Models are poised to be the preferred method for high-throughput phenotyping of physician notes.

Duplicate Docs Excel Report

Title
None found

Similar Docs  Excel Report  more

TitleSimilaritySource
None found