CVJun 8

MAGIS: Evidence-Based Multi-Agent Reasoning for Interpretable Strabismus Clinical Decision-Making

Xikai Tang, Yifan Wang, Jiafan Zhuang, Li Luo, Jinming Guo, Xiaoling Xie, Jiacheng Liu, Peiwei Wei, Lihao Zhong, Xiaoli Kang, Jie Cen, Guangqiang Yin
arXiv:2606.09249v110.2
Predicted impact top 52% in CV · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

For ophthalmologists diagnosing strabismus subtypes, MAGIS provides an interpretable, evidence-based system that reduces hallucination in large vision-language models.

MAGIS introduces a multi-agent reasoning framework for strabismus diagnosis that improves weighted F1 score from 72.0% to 91.3% on a fine-grained benchmark, while enhancing clinical reliability of generated reports.

Strabismus is a common ocular disorder that requires fine-grained subtype diagnosis for individualized treatment planning. However, existing deep learning methods mainly provide diagnostic predictions without transparent reasoning, while recent large vision-language models (LVLMs), although promising for joint image understanding and report generation, remain highly prone to hallucination in this evidence-sensitive and rule-driven medical task. To address these challenges, we propose MAGIS, an evidence-based Multi-AGent reasoning for Interpretable Strabismus diagnosis framework. MAGIS transforms black-box end-to-end generation into a structured diagnostic process consisting of candidate hypothesis generation, dual-evidence constrained context, evidence-based corrective verification, and report generation. Specifically, we introduce a Dual-Evidence Constrained Context (DECC) mechanism that jointly organizes visual evidence from the photograph of the nine cardinal positions of gaze and evidence-based clinical diagnostic rules into a constrained context for reliable diagnostic reasoning. We further develop an Evidence-Based Corrective Verification (EBCV) mechanism that verifies whether the current diagnostic hypothesis is supported by visual evidence, heatmap-based visual cues, and evidence-based clinical diagnostic rules. Hypothesis refinement is triggered when inconsistency is detected. Experiments on a fine-grained strabismus benchmark demonstrate that MAGIS not only significantly outperforms other state-of-the-art diagnostic systems, improving the weighted F1 score from 72.0% to 91.3%, but also substantially improves the clinical reliability (consistency, alignment, and completeness) of generated diagnostic reports. These results demonstrate that MAGIS provides an effective solution for building accurate, evidence-based, and clinically interpretable strabismus diagnosis systems.

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