@Article{Albiol_etal2022, author="Albiol, A. and Albiol, F. and Paredes, R. and Plasencia-Martinez, J. M. and Blanco Barrio, A. and Garcia Santos, J. M. and Tortajada, S. and Gonzalez Montano, V. M. and Rodriguez Godoy, C. E. and Fernandez Gomez, S. and Oliver-Garcia, E. and de la Iglesia Vaya, M. and Marquez Perez, F. L. and Rayo Madrid, J. I.", title="A comparison of Covid-19 early detection between convolutional neural networks and radiologists", journal="Insights into Imaging", year="2022", publisher="Springer", volume="13", number="1", pages="122--12pp", optkeywords="Deep learning; Covid-19; Radiology", abstract="Background The role of chest radiography in COVID-19 disease has changed since the beginning of the pandemic from a diagnostic tool when microbiological resources were scarce to a different one focused on detecting and monitoring COVID-19 lung involvement. Using chest radiographs, early detection of the disease is still helpful in resource-poor environments. However, the sensitivity of a chest radiograph for diagnosing COVID-19 is modest, even for expert radiologists. In this paper, the performance of a deep learning algorithm on the first clinical encounter is evaluated and compared with a group of radiologists with different years of experience. Methods The algorithm uses an ensemble of four deep convolutional networks, Ensemble4Covid, trained to detect COVID-19 on frontal chest radiographs. The algorithm was tested using images from the first clinical encounter of positive and negative cases. Its performance was compared with five radiologists on a smaller test subset of patients. The algorithm{\textquoteright}s performance was also validated using the public dataset COVIDx. Results Compared to the consensus of five radiologists, the Ensemble4Covid model achieved an AUC of 0.85, whereas the radiologists achieved an AUC of 0.71. Compared with other state-of-the-art models, the performance of a single model of our ensemble achieved nonsignificant differences in the public dataset COVIDx. Conclusion The results show that the use of images from the first clinical encounter significantly drops the detection performance of COVID-19. The performance of our Ensemble4Covid under these challenging conditions is considerably higher compared to a consensus of five radiologists. Artificial intelligence can be used for the fast diagnosis of COVID-19.", optnote="WOS:000832727200003", optnote="exported from refbase (https://references.ific.uv.es/refbase/show.php?record=5302), last updated on Tue, 30 Aug 2022 11:41:42 +0000", issn="1869-4101", doi="10.1186/s13244-022-01250-3", opturl="https://doi.org/10.1186/s13244-022-01250-3", language="English" }