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Main Authors: Henry, Isaac, Byrne, Avery, Giza, Christopher, Henry, Ron, Yazdani, Shahram
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.06375
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author Henry, Isaac
Byrne, Avery
Giza, Christopher
Henry, Ron
Yazdani, Shahram
author_facet Henry, Isaac
Byrne, Avery
Giza, Christopher
Henry, Ron
Yazdani, Shahram
contents AI-driven symptom analysis systems face persistent challenges in reliability, interpretability, and hallucination. End-to-end generative approaches often lack traceability and may produce unsupported or inconsistent diagnostic outputs in safety-critical settings. We present SymptomWise, a framework that separates language understanding from diagnostic reasoning. The system combines expert-curated medical knowledge, deterministic codex-driven inference, and constrained use of large language models. Free-text input is mapped to validated symptom representations, then evaluated by a deterministic reasoning module operating over a finite hypothesis space to produce a ranked differential diagnosis. Language models are used only for symptom extraction and optional explanation, not for diagnostic inference. This architecture improves traceability, reduces unsupported conclusions, and enables modular evaluation of system components. Preliminary evaluation on 42 expert-authored challenging pediatric neurology cases shows meaningful overlap with clinician consensus, with the correct diagnosis appearing in the top five differentials in 88% of cases. Beyond medicine, the framework generalizes to other abductive reasoning domains and may serve as a deterministic structuring and routing layer for foundation models, improving precision and potentially reducing unnecessary computational overhead in bounded tasks.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2604_06375
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle SymptomWise: A Deterministic Reasoning Layer for Reliable and Efficient AI Systems
Henry, Isaac
Byrne, Avery
Giza, Christopher
Henry, Ron
Yazdani, Shahram
Artificial Intelligence
AI-driven symptom analysis systems face persistent challenges in reliability, interpretability, and hallucination. End-to-end generative approaches often lack traceability and may produce unsupported or inconsistent diagnostic outputs in safety-critical settings. We present SymptomWise, a framework that separates language understanding from diagnostic reasoning. The system combines expert-curated medical knowledge, deterministic codex-driven inference, and constrained use of large language models. Free-text input is mapped to validated symptom representations, then evaluated by a deterministic reasoning module operating over a finite hypothesis space to produce a ranked differential diagnosis. Language models are used only for symptom extraction and optional explanation, not for diagnostic inference. This architecture improves traceability, reduces unsupported conclusions, and enables modular evaluation of system components. Preliminary evaluation on 42 expert-authored challenging pediatric neurology cases shows meaningful overlap with clinician consensus, with the correct diagnosis appearing in the top five differentials in 88% of cases. Beyond medicine, the framework generalizes to other abductive reasoning domains and may serve as a deterministic structuring and routing layer for foundation models, improving precision and potentially reducing unnecessary computational overhead in bounded tasks.
title SymptomWise: A Deterministic Reasoning Layer for Reliable and Efficient AI Systems
topic Artificial Intelligence
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.06375