Do "New Snow Tablets" Contain Snow? Large Language Models Over-Rely on Names to Identify Ingredients of Chinese Drugs
Do "New Snow Tablets" Contain Snow? Large Language Models Over-Rely on Names to Identify Ingredients of Chinese Drugs
Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) has seen increasing adoption in healthcare, with specialized Large Language Models (LLMs) emerging to support clinical applications. A fundamental requirement for these models is accurate identification of TCM drug ingredients. In this paper, we evaluate how general and TCM-specialized LLMs perform when identifying ingredients of Chinese drugs. Our systematic analysis reveals consistent failure patterns: models often interpret drug names literally, overuse common herbs regardless of relevance, and exhibit erratic behaviors when faced with unfamiliar formulations. LLMs also fail to understand the verification task. These findings demonstrate that current LLMs rely primarily on drug names rather than possessing systematic pharmacological knowledge. To address these limitations, we propose a Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG) approach focused on ingredient names. Experiments across 220 TCM formulations show our method significantly improves accuracy from approximately 50% to 82% in ingredient verification tasks. Our work highlights critical weaknesses in current TCM-specific LLMs and offers a practical solution for enhancing their clinical reliability.
Sifan Li、Yujun Cai、Bryan Hooi、Nanyun Peng、Yiwei Wang
医学现状、医学发展中医学
Sifan Li,Yujun Cai,Bryan Hooi,Nanyun Peng,Yiwei Wang.Do "New Snow Tablets" Contain Snow? Large Language Models Over-Rely on Names to Identify Ingredients of Chinese Drugs[EB/OL].(2025-04-03)[2025-05-06].https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.03786.点此复制
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