AUTHOR=Ouyang Hanqiang , Meng Fanyu , Liu Jianfang , Song Xinhang , Li Yuan , Yuan Yuan , Wang Chunjie , Lang Ning , Tian Shuai , Yao Meiyi , Liu Xiaoguang , Yuan Huishu , Jiang Shuqiang , Jiang Liang TITLE=Evaluation of Deep Learning-Based Automated Detection of Primary Spine Tumors on MRI Using the Turing Test JOURNAL=Frontiers in Oncology VOLUME=12 YEAR=2022 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/oncology/articles/10.3389/fonc.2022.814667 DOI=10.3389/fonc.2022.814667 ISSN=2234-943X ABSTRACT=Background

Recently, the Turing test has been used to investigate whether machines have intelligence similar to humans. Our study aimed to assess the ability of an artificial intelligence (AI) system for spine tumor detection using the Turing test.

Methods

Our retrospective study data included 12179 images from 321 patients for developing AI detection systems and 6635 images from 187 patients for the Turing test. We utilized a deep learning-based tumor detection system with Faster R-CNN architecture, which generates region proposals by Region Proposal Network in the first stage and corrects the position and the size of the bounding box of the lesion area in the second stage. Each choice question featured four bounding boxes enclosing an identical tumor. Three were detected by the proposed deep learning model, whereas the other was annotated by a doctor; the results were shown to six doctors as respondents. If the respondent did not correctly identify the image annotated by a human, his answer was considered a misclassification. If all misclassification rates were >30%, the respondents were considered unable to distinguish the AI-detected tumor from the human-annotated one, which indicated that the AI system passed the Turing test.

Results

The average misclassification rates in the Turing test were 51.2% (95% CI: 45.7%–57.5%) in the axial view (maximum of 62%, minimum of 44%) and 44.5% (95% CI: 38.2%–51.8%) in the sagittal view (maximum of 59%, minimum of 36%). The misclassification rates of all six respondents were >30%; therefore, our AI system passed the Turing test.

Conclusion

Our proposed intelligent spine tumor detection system has a similar detection ability to annotation doctors and may be an efficient tool to assist radiologists or orthopedists in primary spine tumor detection.