The Clinicians’ Guide to Large Language Models: A General Perspective With a Focus on Hallucinations

Large language models (LLMs) are artificial intelligence tools that have the prospect of profoundly changing how we practice all aspects of medicine. Considering the incredible potential of LLMs in medicine and the interest of many health care stakeholders for implementation into routine practice, i...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inInteractive journal of medical research Vol. 14; p. e59823
Main Authors Roustan, Dimitri, Bastardot, François
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Canada JMIR Publications 28.01.2025
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ISSN1929-073X
1929-073X
DOI10.2196/59823

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Summary:Large language models (LLMs) are artificial intelligence tools that have the prospect of profoundly changing how we practice all aspects of medicine. Considering the incredible potential of LLMs in medicine and the interest of many health care stakeholders for implementation into routine practice, it is therefore essential that clinicians be aware of the basic risks associated with the use of these models. Namely, a significant risk associated with the use of LLMs is their potential to create hallucinations. Hallucinations (false information) generated by LLMs arise from a multitude of causes, including both factors related to the training dataset as well as their auto-regressive nature. The implications for clinical practice range from the generation of inaccurate diagnostic and therapeutic information to the reinforcement of flawed diagnostic reasoning pathways, as well as a lack of reliability if not used properly. To reduce this risk, we developed a general technical framework for approaching LLMs in general clinical practice, as well as for implementation on a larger institutional scale.
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ISSN:1929-073X
1929-073X
DOI:10.2196/59823