Small Agent Group is the Future of Digital Health
Yuqiao Meng, Luoxi Tang, Dazheng Zhang, Rafael Brens, Elvys J. Romero, Nancy Guo, Safa elkefi, Zhaohan Xi
ICML 2026 regular
Tóm tắt (nguồn: OpenReview · © tác giả)
The rapid adoption of large language models (LLMs) in digital health has been driven by a "scaling-first" philosophy, i.e., the assumption that clinical intelligence increases with model size and data. However, real-world clinical needs include not only effectiveness, but also reliability and reasonable deployment cost. Since clinical decision-making is inherently collaborative, we challenge the monolithic scaling paradigm and ask whether a Small Agent Group (SAG) can support better clinical reasoning. SAG shifts from single-model intelligence to collective expertise by distributing reasoning, evidence-based analysis, and critical audit through a collaborative deliberation process. To assess the clinical utility of SAG, we conduct extensive evaluations using diverse clinical metrics spanning effectiveness, reliability, and deployment cost. Our results show that SAG achieves superior performance compared to a single giant model, both with and without additional optimization or retrieval-augmented generation. These findings suggest that the synergistic reasoning represented by SAG can substitute for model parameter growth in clinical settings. Overall, SAG offers a scalable solution to digital health that better balances effectiveness, reliability, and deployment efficiency.
Từ khoá
Metadata từ BioTender-max/icml2026-ai-bio (CC0-1.0). Phở không lưu trữ bản PDF; link trỏ về nguồn gốc.
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