2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.carj.2019.08.010
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Ethics of Artificial Intelligence in Radiology: Summary of the Joint European and North American Multisociety Statement

Abstract: This is a condensed summary of an international multisociety statement on ethics of artificial intelligence (AI) in radiology produced by the ACR, European Society of Radiology, RSNA, Society for Imaging Informatics in Medicine, European Society of Medical Imaging Informatics, Canadian Association of Radiologists, and American Association of Physicists in Medicine. AI has great potential to increase efficiency and accuracy throughout radiology, but it also carries inherent pitfalls and biases. Widespread use o… Show more

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Cited by 129 publications
(141 citation statements)
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“…Reference any previous studies that used the same dataset and specify how the current study differs. Adhere to ethical guidelines to assure that the study is conducted appropriately; describe the ethics review and informed consent (19). Provide links to data sources and/or images, if available.…”
Section: Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Reference any previous studies that used the same dataset and specify how the current study differs. Adhere to ethical guidelines to assure that the study is conducted appropriately; describe the ethics review and informed consent (19). Provide links to data sources and/or images, if available.…”
Section: Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The recent North America and European multi-society paper about "Ethics of artificial intelligence in radiology" reports the risk of the automation bias [17].…”
Section: Automation Biasmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Under the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), patients own and control their own sensitive and/or identifiable data, and must give explicit consent for data re-use or sharing [12]. In other parts of the world, individual rights may be superseded by the collective societal welfare, or ownership of imaging data may reside with the entity performing the imaging [6], making data access easier. Under GDPR rules, patients must give their consent if their imaging studies are to be used to train an AI algorithm, and that consent may need to take a dynamic form, being varied or re-obtained for each version of the algorithm [6].…”
Section: Data Ownership and Privacymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In other parts of the world, individual rights may be superseded by the collective societal welfare, or ownership of imaging data may reside with the entity performing the imaging [6], making data access easier. Under GDPR rules, patients must give their consent if their imaging studies are to be used to train an AI algorithm, and that consent may need to take a dynamic form, being varied or re-obtained for each version of the algorithm [6]. These legal restrictions can inhibit AI research in some parts of the world relative to others, skewing the academic and commercial playing field.…”
Section: Data Ownership and Privacymentioning
confidence: 99%
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