Are normative expert systems appropriate for diagnostic pathology?
AUTOR(ES)
Diamond, L W
RESUMO
Conceptual models for diagnostic reasoning proposed in the medical literature are presented to stimulate discussion about the issue of the appropriateness of probabilistic knowledge-based systems for medical diagnosis. Evidence is presented to corroborate the authors' view that diagnosis is a problem-solving task, rather than a decision-making task. In the authors' opinion, probabilistic reasoning is better suited to situations dealing with choices for clinical intervention, rather than to those dealing with determining the correct diagnosis. A critique is given of a diagnostic Bayesian expert system for lymph node pathology. In empirical studies, diagnostic Bayesian systems have been shown to typically list the correct diagnosis as the program's first choice 60% to 70% of the time. One reason for this undistinguished level of diagnostic performance is that Bayesian systems are not designed to represent and use knowledge the same way that an expert does.