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Main Authors: Qin, Zhenyue, Yin, Yu, Campbell, Dylan, Wu, Xuansheng, Zou, Ke, Tham, Yih-Chung, Liu, Ninghao, Zhang, Xiuzhen, Chen, Qingyu
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.01620
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author Qin, Zhenyue
Yin, Yu
Campbell, Dylan
Wu, Xuansheng
Zou, Ke
Tham, Yih-Chung
Liu, Ninghao
Zhang, Xiuzhen
Chen, Qingyu
author_facet Qin, Zhenyue
Yin, Yu
Campbell, Dylan
Wu, Xuansheng
Zou, Ke
Tham, Yih-Chung
Liu, Ninghao
Zhang, Xiuzhen
Chen, Qingyu
contents The prevalence of vision-threatening eye diseases is a significant global burden, with many cases remaining undiagnosed or diagnosed too late for effective treatment. Large vision-language models (LVLMs) have the potential to assist in understanding anatomical information, diagnosing eye diseases, and drafting interpretations and follow-up plans, thereby reducing the burden on clinicians and improving access to eye care. However, limited benchmarks are available to assess LVLMs' performance in ophthalmology-specific applications. In this study, we introduce LMOD, a large-scale multimodal ophthalmology benchmark consisting of 21,993 instances across (1) five ophthalmic imaging modalities: optical coherence tomography, color fundus photographs, scanning laser ophthalmoscopy, lens photographs, and surgical scenes; (2) free-text, demographic, and disease biomarker information; and (3) primary ophthalmology-specific applications such as anatomical information understanding, disease diagnosis, and subgroup analysis. In addition, we benchmarked 13 state-of-the-art LVLM representatives from closed-source, open-source, and medical domains. The results demonstrate a significant performance drop for LVLMs in ophthalmology compared to other domains. Systematic error analysis further identified six major failure modes: misclassification, failure to abstain, inconsistent reasoning, hallucination, assertions without justification, and lack of domain-specific knowledge. In contrast, supervised neural networks specifically trained on these tasks as baselines demonstrated high accuracy. These findings underscore the pressing need for benchmarks in the development and validation of ophthalmology-specific LVLMs.
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publishDate 2024
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spellingShingle LMOD: A Large Multimodal Ophthalmology Dataset and Benchmark for Large Vision-Language Models
Qin, Zhenyue
Yin, Yu
Campbell, Dylan
Wu, Xuansheng
Zou, Ke
Tham, Yih-Chung
Liu, Ninghao
Zhang, Xiuzhen
Chen, Qingyu
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
The prevalence of vision-threatening eye diseases is a significant global burden, with many cases remaining undiagnosed or diagnosed too late for effective treatment. Large vision-language models (LVLMs) have the potential to assist in understanding anatomical information, diagnosing eye diseases, and drafting interpretations and follow-up plans, thereby reducing the burden on clinicians and improving access to eye care. However, limited benchmarks are available to assess LVLMs' performance in ophthalmology-specific applications. In this study, we introduce LMOD, a large-scale multimodal ophthalmology benchmark consisting of 21,993 instances across (1) five ophthalmic imaging modalities: optical coherence tomography, color fundus photographs, scanning laser ophthalmoscopy, lens photographs, and surgical scenes; (2) free-text, demographic, and disease biomarker information; and (3) primary ophthalmology-specific applications such as anatomical information understanding, disease diagnosis, and subgroup analysis. In addition, we benchmarked 13 state-of-the-art LVLM representatives from closed-source, open-source, and medical domains. The results demonstrate a significant performance drop for LVLMs in ophthalmology compared to other domains. Systematic error analysis further identified six major failure modes: misclassification, failure to abstain, inconsistent reasoning, hallucination, assertions without justification, and lack of domain-specific knowledge. In contrast, supervised neural networks specifically trained on these tasks as baselines demonstrated high accuracy. These findings underscore the pressing need for benchmarks in the development and validation of ophthalmology-specific LVLMs.
title LMOD: A Large Multimodal Ophthalmology Dataset and Benchmark for Large Vision-Language Models
topic Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.01620