Marta Bianca Maria Ranzini

h-index21
2papers

2 Papers

AIDec 4, 2025Code
Are LLMs Truly Multilingual? Exploring Zero-Shot Multilingual Capability of LLMs for Information Retrieval: An Italian Healthcare Use Case

Vignesh Kumar Kembu, Pierandrea Morandini, Marta Bianca Maria Ranzini et al.

Large Language Models (LLMs) have become a key topic in AI and NLP, transforming sectors like healthcare, finance, education, and marketing by improving customer service, automating tasks, providing insights, improving diagnostics, and personalizing learning experiences. Information extraction from clinical records is a crucial task in digital healthcare. Although traditional NLP techniques have been used for this in the past, they often fall short due to the complexity, variability of clinical language, and high inner semantics in the free clinical text. Recently, Large Language Models (LLMs) have become a powerful tool for better understanding and generating human-like text, making them highly effective in this area. In this paper, we explore the ability of open-source multilingual LLMs to understand EHRs (Electronic Health Records) in Italian and help extract information from them in real-time. Our detailed experimental campaign on comorbidity extraction from EHR reveals that some LLMs struggle in zero-shot, on-premises settings, and others show significant variation in performance, struggling to generalize across various diseases when compared to native pattern matching and manual annotations.

CVNov 14, 2024
Exploring Zero-Shot Anomaly Detection with CLIP in Medical Imaging: Are We There Yet?

Aldo Marzullo, Marta Bianca Maria Ranzini

Zero-shot anomaly detection (ZSAD) offers potential for identifying anomalies in medical imaging without task-specific training. In this paper, we evaluate CLIP-based models, originally developed for industrial tasks, on brain tumor detection using the BraTS-MET dataset. Our analysis examines their ability to detect medical-specific anomalies with no or minimal supervision, addressing the challenges posed by limited data annotation. While these models show promise in transferring general knowledge to medical tasks, their performance falls short of the precision required for clinical use. Our findings highlight the need for further adaptation before CLIP-based models can be reliably applied to medical anomaly detection.