Caroline Struthers
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Oh yeah - I remember now.
Oh yeah - I remember now.
I don't know if it will happen soon, but it will be possible within 1-2 years. AI systems like this have to be trained, so someone would have to spend resources on it. This is mostly money and labor.
But being to copy (well, do a lot better and faster anyway) the process of systematic reviews is on the low-end of what AI will be capable of. Real systematic reviews, not cherry-picking that arbitrarily filters out 99% and pretends this isn't a reflection of the evidence.
Only question is who would build such a system. It would essentially make Cochrane mostly obsolete, so that could be awkward. It will happen for sure, but the uncertainty is political more than technical. Lots of jobs doing nothing but this GIGO process. And removing people from the loop removes a lot of the bias that keep many of those jobs going.
We all know how this review would look like if the Cochrane handbook were applied, I don't think a single study actually qualifies. For sure it would not have come to the conclusion that this is worth a damn.
But as you said, the algorithms need training. The thing is it gets easier to train with each new iteration and we likely won't be dependent on Cochrane for setting something up. Some angry scientist who has a buddy that specializes in automation could likely set it up somewhere in the future, from my limited understanding.
Excel got replaced by an accounting-program which got replaced by a better one and so on and so fort, tremendously increasing output of a single accountant. I'd imagine the coming evolutions would eliminate the job almost completely.
An Ianucci sketch on this might have more effect ....Well that’s very reassuring – the update on Penelope’s weaving is “underway”!
I can’t remember, in politico-speak is “in the coming months” sooner or later than “in due course”?
This is becoming more and more like a satire written by Armando Iannucci.
or reviewers of published papers who only read the abstract....“if scientists come to rely on AI programs to prepare literature reviews or summarise their findings, the proper context of the work and the deep scrutiny that results deserve could be lost”.
Cochrane is so good at that "deep scrutiny" isn't it?! https://www.theguardian.com/science...ban-listing-of-chatgpt-as-co-author-on-papers
Thanks Caroline.A spokesperson for Cochrane told The BMJ that its editors have to consider whether a review “would add value to the existing evidence base,” highlighting the work of the UK’s National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, which looked at puberty blockers and hormones for adolescents in 2021. “That review found the evidence to be inconclusive, and there have been no significant primary studies published since.”
The weird thing about this is it doesn't seem to understand that AI-generated content can, and should, be checked by humans.“if scientists come to rely on AI programs to prepare literature reviews or summarise their findings, the proper context of the work and the deep scrutiny that results deserve could be lost”.
Cochrane is so good at that "deep scrutiny" isn't it?! https://www.theguardian.com/science...ban-listing-of-chatgpt-as-co-author-on-papers
The weird thing about this is it doesn't seem to understand that AI-generated content can, and should, be checked by humans.
Cochrane is so good at that "deep scrutiny" isn't it?!
It's the basic trainee level scrutiny I find a bit lacking.
Speaking of which, I saw a few people experimenting with ChatGPT to review some of their old papers.As should content that is generated by humans
That's a terrific summary of the situation, thanks
Yes, interesting what you say about the protocol and NICE. I was reading this BMJ article today https://www.bmj.com/content/380/bmj.p382?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email.
You don't need to read the whole thing, but towards the end it says
"Cochrane, an international organisation that has built its reputation on delivering independent evidence reviews, has yet to publish a systematic review of gender treatments in minors. But The BMJ has learnt that in 2020 Cochrane accepted a proposal to review puberty blockers and that it worked with a team of researchers through 2021 in developing a protocol, but it ultimately rejected it after peer review. A spokesperson for Cochrane told The BMJ that its editors have to consider whether a review “would add value to the existing evidence base,” highlighting the work of the UK’s National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, which looked at puberty blockers and hormones for adolescents in 2021. “That review found the evidence to be inconclusive, and there have been no significant primary studies published since.”
this is an interesting point.
Back on topic.
Trial By Error: What the Hell is Going on with Cochrane’s Long-Delayed Re-Review of “Exercise Therapies”?
I echo this.That's a terrific summary of the situation, thanks @dave30th.
No answer yet.Earlier this week, I sent this letter to Hilda at her IAG e-mail address :
(See also this post above.)
I think the situation is hardly comparable -- only able to skim-read but if i understood correctly, the NICE commissioned an external reviewer to evaluate the evidence who found the evidence base not strong enough to issue an actual position:
"The evidence reviews were published in March 2021. Unfortunately, the available evidence was not deemed strong enough to form the basis of a policy position."
I realized that bit but the reasoning behind this officially seems to be there is no sufficiently strong evidence base to do a review. That is a step before doing the actual assessment of the evidence.For me what is relevant is not whether the ME exercise situation or the use of puberty blockers have any specific parallels, but rather that it is a precedent of Cochrane using NICE reviews to inform their own action.