Huang Chih-Wei, Wu Bethany C Y, Nguyen Phung Anh, Wang Hsiao-Han, Kao Chih-Chung, Lee Pei-Chen, Rahmanti Annisa Ristya, Hsu Jason C, Yang Hsuan-Chia, Li Yu-Chuan Jack
International Center for Health Information Technology (ICHIT), Taipei Medical University, Taipei, Taiwan; Taipei Medical University Ringgold standard institution - Center for Simulation in Medical Education, Taipei 116, Taiwan.
National Taiwan University Children and Family Research Center Sponsored by CTBC Charity Foundation, Taipei, Taiwan.
Comput Methods Programs Biomed. 2023 May;233:107480. doi: 10.1016/j.cmpb.2023.107480. Epub 2023 Mar 12.
The promising use of artificial intelligence (AI) to emulate human empathy may help a physician engage with a more empathic doctor-patient relationship. This study demonstrates the application of artificial empathy based on facial emotion recognition to evaluate doctor-patient relationships in clinical practice.
A prospective study used recorded video data of doctor-patient clinical encounters in dermatology outpatient clinics, Taipei Municipal Wanfang Hospital, and Taipei Medical University Hospital collected from March to December 2019. Two cameras recorded the facial expressions of four doctors and 348 adult patients during regular clinical practice. Facial emotion recognition was used to analyze the basic emotions of doctors and patients with a temporal resolution of 1 second. In addition, a physician-patient satisfaction questionnaire was administered after each clinical session, and two standard patients gave impartial feedback to avoid bias.
Data from 326 clinical session videos showed that (1) Doctors expressed more emotions than patients (t [326] > = 2.998, p < = 0.003), including anger, happiness, disgust, and sadness; the only emotion that patients showed more than doctors was surprise (t [326] = -4.428, p < .001) (p < .001). (2) Patients felt happier during the latter half of the session (t [326] = -2.860, p = .005), indicating a good doctor-patient relationship.
Artificial empathy can offer objective observations on how doctors' and patients' emotions change. With the ability to detect emotions in 3/4 view and profile images, artificial empathy could be an accessible evaluation tool to study doctor-patient relationships in practical clinical settings.
人工智能(AI)有望用于模拟人类同理心,这可能有助于医生建立更具同理心的医患关系。本研究展示了基于面部表情识别的人工同理心在临床实践中评估医患关系的应用。
一项前瞻性研究使用了台北市万芳医院和台北医学大学医院皮肤科门诊医患临床诊疗的录像数据,这些数据于2019年3月至12月收集。两台摄像机记录了4名医生和348名成年患者在常规临床诊疗过程中的面部表情。面部表情识别用于分析医生和患者的基本情绪,时间分辨率为1秒。此外,每次临床诊疗结束后发放医患满意度问卷,两名标准化患者给出公正反馈以避免偏差。
326段临床诊疗视频的数据显示:(1)医生表达的情绪比患者更多(t[326] >= 2.998,p <= 0.003),包括愤怒、快乐、厌恶和悲伤;患者比医生表现出更多的唯一情绪是惊讶(t[326] = -4.428,p <.001)(p <.001)。(2)患者在诊疗后半段感觉更快乐(t[326] = -2.860,p =.005),表明医患关系良好。
人工同理心能够对医生和患者的情绪变化提供客观观察。凭借在3/4视角和侧面图像中检测情绪的能力,人工同理心可以成为在实际临床环境中研究医患关系的一种便捷评估工具。