• Postgrad Med J · Jun 2024

    ChatGPT prompts for generating multiple-choice questions in medical education and evidence on their validity: a literature review.

    • Yavuz Selim Kıyak and Emre Emekli.
    • Department of Medical Education and Informatics, Faculty of Medicine, Gazi University, Ankara 06500, Turkey.
    • Postgrad Med J. 2024 Jun 6.

    AbstractChatGPT's role in creating multiple-choice questions (MCQs) is growing but the validity of these artificial-intelligence-generated questions is unclear. This literature review was conducted to address the urgent need for understanding the application of ChatGPT in generating MCQs for medical education. Following the database search and screening of 1920 studies, we found 23 relevant studies. We extracted the prompts for MCQ generation and assessed the validity evidence of MCQs. The findings showed that prompts varied, including referencing specific exam styles and adopting specific personas, which align with recommended prompt engineering tactics. The validity evidence covered various domains, showing mixed accuracy rates, with some studies indicating comparable quality to human-written questions, and others highlighting differences in difficulty and discrimination levels, alongside a significant reduction in question creation time. Despite its efficiency, we highlight the necessity of careful review and suggest a need for further research to optimize the use of ChatGPT in question generation. Main messages  Ensure high-quality outputs by utilizing well-designed prompts; medical educators should prioritize the use of detailed, clear ChatGPT prompts when generating MCQs. Avoid using ChatGPT-generated MCQs directly in examinations without thorough review to prevent inaccuracies and ensure relevance. Leverage ChatGPT's potential to streamline the test development process, enhancing efficiency without compromising quality.© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Postgraduate Medical Journal.

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