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Student voices : synergising artificial and human intelligence in health science education
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Student voices : synergising artificial and human intelligence in health science education

Zijing Hu, Caixia Qiu, Anqi Wang, Shungui Xu, Jing Ye, Jiawen Zou, Shuting Liu, Weixiang Yuan and Jiazhe Lv
BMC medical education, Vol.26(1), p.185
05/01/2026
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/10210/519645
PMID: 41491181

Abstract

Education & Educational Research Education, Scientific Disciplines Social Sciences
BackgroundThere is a dire need to enhance health science education through technology to meet the demands of 21st-century education globally. This study explored the integration of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Human Intelligence (HI) in health science education.MethodsGuided by the Technological, Pedagogical, and Content Knowledge and Diffusion of Innovation frameworks, a descriptive qualitative single-case study was conducted within an interpretivist paradigm. Purposive sampling recruited six postgraduate and residency students with dual exposure to conventional and AI-assisted learning. Semi-structured interviews were thematically analysed.ResultsFindings revealed that students perceived AI as a valuable supplementary tool that enhanced diagnostic confidence, accelerated knowledge access, and simulated rare clinical scenarios. AI facilitated self-directed learning, structured clinical reasoning, and supported overburdened educators. However, participants cautioned against over-reliance, citing risks such as reduced critical thinking, algorithmic bias, and potential erosion of humanistic care. The adoption of AI was influenced by its relative advantages, alignment with learning preferences, and the possibility of low-risk experimentation; however, challenges arose from the complexity of prompt design and the lack of formal training.ConclusionThe study concluded that effective AI-HI integration requires AI literacy, ethical governance, and hybrid models combining technological efficiency with mentorship. Institutional investment in curricula, faculty development, and policy frameworks is essential to ensure responsible, context-sensitive adoption.
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https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-025-08545-1View
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