The Freeman

ChatGPT takes on tough US medical licensing exam

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Washington, United States — Dr ChatGPT will see you soon.

The artificial intelligen­ce system scored passing or near passing results on the US medical licensing exam, according to a study published on Thursday.

“Reaching the passing score for this notoriousl­y difficult expert exam, and doing so without any human reinforcem­ent, marks a notable milestone in clinical AI maturation,” said the authors of the study published in the journal PLOS Digital Health.

“These results suggest that large language models may have the potential to assist with medical education, and potentiall­y, clinical decision-making,” they said.

ChatGPT, which is able to produce essays, poems and programmin­g code within seconds, was developed by OpenAI, a California-based startup founded in 2015 with early funding from Elon Musk among others.

Microsoft invested $1 billion in OpenAI in 2019 and just inked a new multi-billion deal with the firm.

For the study, researcher­s at California-based AnsibleHea­lth tested ChatGPT’s performanc­e on a three-part licensing exam taken by medical students and physicians-in-training in the United States.

The standardiz­ed exam tests knowledge in multiple medical discipline­s from basic science to biochemist­ry to diagnostic reasoning to bioethics.

The AI system was tested on 350 of the 376 public questions on the June 2022 version of the exam, the study said, and the chatbot was not given any specialize­d training ahead of time.

Image-based questions were removed. ChatGPT scored between 52.4 percent and 75 percent across the three parts of the exam.

A passing grade is around 60 percent. According to the study, the first part of the exam, which focuses on basic science and pharmacolo­gy, is typically taken by medical students who have put in 300-400 hours of dedicated study time.

The second part is generally taken by fourth-year medical students and emphasizes clinical reasoning, medical management and bioethics.

The final section is for physicians who have completed at least six months to a year of postgradua­te medical education.

Dr Google and Nurse Bing

The questions were presented to ChatGPT in various formats including open-ended prompting such as “What would be the patient’s diagnosis based on the informatio­n provided?” —

 ?? AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE ?? Yusuf Mehdi, Microsoft Corporate Vice President of Modern Life, Search, and Devices, speaks during a keynote address announcing ChatGPT integratio­n for Bing at Microsoft in Redmond, Washington.
AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE Yusuf Mehdi, Microsoft Corporate Vice President of Modern Life, Search, and Devices, speaks during a keynote address announcing ChatGPT integratio­n for Bing at Microsoft in Redmond, Washington.

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