Ultra-lightweight uncertainty-aware ensemble for large-scale multi-class medical MRI diagnosis is a research paper published in Frontiers in Radiology (2025). On theSindex it has a DataRank of 0.165. It has been cited 2 times, with 2 citing works in its 1-hop citation network.
This paper introduces an Ultra-Lightweight Uncertainty-Aware Ensemble (UALE) model for large-scale multi-class medical MRI diagnosis, evaluated on the 2024 Benchmark Diagnostic MRI and Medical Imaging Dataset containing 40 classes and 33,616 images. The model integrates five specialized micro-expert networks, each designed to capture distinct MRI features, and combines them using a confidence-weighted ensemble mechanism enhanced with variance-based uncertainty quantification for robust, reliable predictions. With only 0.05M parameters and 0.18 GFLOPs, UALE achieves high efficiency and competitive performance among ultra-lightweight models with an accuracy of 69.1% and an F1 score of 68.3%. Besides lightweight models, the paper offers an extensive analysis and performance comparison with fifteen state-of-the-art models, discusses various datasets, elaborates on uncertainty estimates pertaining to the clinical trustworthiness of the models and possible clinical deployment, and highlights trade-offs and avenues for future work in economically constrained settings. The extreme compactness and reliability of the UALE affords it unique utility in scalable medical diagnostics suitable for low-resource clinical settings and portable imaging devices, such as rural hospitals.
FAIR checklist signals are shown for context only and do not affect DataRank scoring.
Base Score Contribution
0.165
From this paper's citation signal
Citation Network Contribution
0
From 0 citing papers with measurable signal
This paper's DataRank is currently driven only by its base citation score. None of the citing papers had measurable citation signal.
Learn more about DataRank methodology →DataRank blends this paper's own citation count with the influence of the papers that cite it. Here, roughly 100% comes from its base citations and 0% from the citation network.
Citers are pulled from OpenAlex sorted by cited_by_count:descand capped per paper, so when the cap binds we keep the highest-signal references and the score is reproducible across reruns.