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GPT-4 in Nuclear Medicine Education: Does It Outperform GPT-3.5?

Geoffrey Currie

2023Journal of Nuclear Medicine Technology18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The emergence of ChatGPT has challenged academic integrity in teaching institutions, including those providing nuclear medicine training. Although previous evaluations of ChatGPT have suggested a limited scope for academic writing, the March 2023 release of generative pretrained transformer (GPT)-4 promises enhanced capabilities that require evaluation. <b>Methods:</b> Examinations (final and calculation) and written assignments for nuclear medicine subjects were tested using GPT-3.5 and GPT-4. GPT-3.5 and GPT-4 responses were evaluated by Turnitin software for artificial intelligence scores, marked against standardized rubrics, and compared with the mean performance of student cohorts. <b>Results:</b> ChatGPT powered by GPT-3.5 performed poorly in calculation examinations (31.4%), compared with GPT-4 (59.1%). GPT-3.5 failed each of 3 written tasks (39.9%), whereas GPT-4 passed each task (56.3%). <b>Conclusion:</b> Although GPT-3.5 poses a minimal risk to academic integrity, its usefulness as a cheating tool can be significantly enhanced by GPT-4 but remains prone to hallucination and fabrication.

Topics & Concepts

RubricCheatingNuclear medicineMedical physicsMedicineComputer sciencePsychologyMathematics educationSocial psychologyArtificial Intelligence in Healthcare and Education
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