IVCVCYLGAug 9, 2023

Are Sex-based Physiological Differences the Cause of Gender Bias for Chest X-ray Diagnosis?

arXiv:2308.05129v117 citationsh-index: 22
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses bias in medical AI for chest X-ray diagnosis, providing insights that could improve fairness, though it is incremental in exploring causes rather than proposing new mitigation methods.

The study investigated the causes of gender bias in machine learning-based chest X-ray diagnosis, finding that dataset-specific factors, not fundamental physiological differences like breast tissue, are the main drivers of performance gaps between males and females on widely used NIH and CheXpert datasets.

While many studies have assessed the fairness of AI algorithms in the medical field, the causes of differences in prediction performance are often unknown. This lack of knowledge about the causes of bias hampers the efficacy of bias mitigation, as evidenced by the fact that simple dataset balancing still often performs best in reducing performance gaps but is unable to resolve all performance differences. In this work, we investigate the causes of gender bias in machine learning-based chest X-ray diagnosis. In particular, we explore the hypothesis that breast tissue leads to underexposure of the lungs and causes lower model performance. Methodologically, we propose a new sampling method which addresses the highly skewed distribution of recordings per patient in two widely used public datasets, while at the same time reducing the impact of label errors. Our comprehensive analysis of gender differences across diseases, datasets, and gender representations in the training set shows that dataset imbalance is not the sole cause of performance differences. Moreover, relative group performance differs strongly between datasets, indicating important dataset-specific factors influencing male/female group performance. Finally, we investigate the effect of breast tissue more specifically, by cropping out the breasts from recordings, finding that this does not resolve the observed performance gaps. In conclusion, our results indicate that dataset-specific factors, not fundamental physiological differences, are the main drivers of male--female performance gaps in chest X-ray analyses on widely used NIH and CheXpert Dataset.

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