The Use of Machine Learning and Explainable Artificial Intelligence in Gut Microbiome Research: A Scoping Review
Author(s) -
Hania Tourab,
Laura Lopez-Perez,
Pena Arroyo-Gallego,
Eleni Georga,
Miguel Rujas,
Francesca Romana Ponziani,
Macarena Torrego-Ellacuria,
Beatriz Merino-Barbancho,
Neri Niccolo,
Gastone Ciuti,
Dimitrios Fotiadis,
Gasbarrini Antonio,
Maria Fernanda Cabrera,
Maria Teresa Arredondo,
Giuseppe Fico
Publication year - 2025
Publication title -
ieee journal of biomedical and health informatics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Magazines
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.293
H-Index - 125
eISSN - 2168-2208
pISSN - 2168-2194
DOI - 10.1109/jbhi.2025.3593198
Subject(s) - bioengineering , communication, networking and broadcast technologies , components, circuits, devices and systems , computing and processing , signal processing and analysis
Gut microbiome research has made tremendous progress, especially with the integration of machine learning and artificial intelligence that can provide new insights from complex microbiome data and its impact on human health. The use of explainable artificial intelligence is becoming critical in medicine and adopting it in precision medicine-models leveraging gut microbiome data is appealing for providing more transparency and trustworthiness in clinical research. This scoping review evaluates the use of machine learning and explainable artificial intelligence techniques and identifies existing gaps in knowledge in this research area to suggest future research directions. Online databases (PubMed and Scopus) were searched to retrieve papers published between 2018-2024, and from which we selected 76 publications. Different clinical applications of machine learning and artificial intelligence techniques in gut microbiome studies were explored in the reviewed articles. We observed a high prevalence in the use of black box models in the field, with Random Forest being the most used algorithm. The explainability remains somewhat limited in the field, but it appears to be improving. Researchers showed interest in SHAP applications as an explainable technique. Finally, not enough attention was paid to the reproducibility of the research work published. This review highlights opportunities for advancing research on explainable artificial intelligence models in the field of microbiome, supporting future applications of microbiome-based precision medicine.
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