TY - JOUR AU - Bennis I AU - Mouwafaq S AB -
Background As part of qualitative research, the thematic analysis is time-consuming and technical. The rise of generative artificial intelligence (A.I.), especially large language models, has brought hope in enhancing and partly automating thematic analysis.
Methods The study assessed the relative efficacy of conventional against AI-assisted thematic analysis when investigating the psychosocial impact of cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) scars. Four hundred forty-eight participant responses from a core study were analysed comparing nine A.I. generative models: Llama 3.1 405B, Claude 3.5 Sonnet, NotebookLM, Gemini 1.5 Advanced Ultra, ChatGPT o1-Pro, ChatGPT o1, GrokV2, DeepSeekV3, Gemini 2.0 Advanced with manual expert analysis. Jamovi software maintained methodological rigour through Cohen’s Kappa coefficient calculations for concordance assessment and similarity measurement via Python using Jaccard index computations.
Results Advanced A.I. models showed impressive congruence with reference standards; some even had perfect concordance (Jaccard index = 1.00). Gender-specific analyses demonstrated consistent performance across subgroups, allowing a nuanced understanding of psychosocial consequences. The grounded theory process developed the framework for the fragile circle of vulnerabilities that incorporated new insights into CL-related psychosocial complexity while establishing novel dimensions.
Conclusions This study shows how A.I. can be incorporated in qualitative research methodology, particularly in complex psychosocial analysis. Consequently, the A.I. deep learning models proved to be highly efficient and accurate. These findings imply that the future directions for qualitative research methodology should focus on maintaining analytical rigour through the utilisation of technology using a combination of A.I. capabilities and human expertise following standardised future checklist of reporting full process transparency.
BT - BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making DO - 10.1186/s12911-025-02961-5 IS - 1 LA - eng N2 -Background As part of qualitative research, the thematic analysis is time-consuming and technical. The rise of generative artificial intelligence (A.I.), especially large language models, has brought hope in enhancing and partly automating thematic analysis.
Methods The study assessed the relative efficacy of conventional against AI-assisted thematic analysis when investigating the psychosocial impact of cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) scars. Four hundred forty-eight participant responses from a core study were analysed comparing nine A.I. generative models: Llama 3.1 405B, Claude 3.5 Sonnet, NotebookLM, Gemini 1.5 Advanced Ultra, ChatGPT o1-Pro, ChatGPT o1, GrokV2, DeepSeekV3, Gemini 2.0 Advanced with manual expert analysis. Jamovi software maintained methodological rigour through Cohen’s Kappa coefficient calculations for concordance assessment and similarity measurement via Python using Jaccard index computations.
Results Advanced A.I. models showed impressive congruence with reference standards; some even had perfect concordance (Jaccard index = 1.00). Gender-specific analyses demonstrated consistent performance across subgroups, allowing a nuanced understanding of psychosocial consequences. The grounded theory process developed the framework for the fragile circle of vulnerabilities that incorporated new insights into CL-related psychosocial complexity while establishing novel dimensions.
Conclusions This study shows how A.I. can be incorporated in qualitative research methodology, particularly in complex psychosocial analysis. Consequently, the A.I. deep learning models proved to be highly efficient and accurate. These findings imply that the future directions for qualitative research methodology should focus on maintaining analytical rigour through the utilisation of technology using a combination of A.I. capabilities and human expertise following standardised future checklist of reporting full process transparency.
PB - Springer Science and Business Media LLC PY - 2025 T2 - BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making TI - Advancing AI-driven thematic analysis in qualitative research: a comparative study of nine generative models on Cutaneous Leishmaniasis data UR - https://bmcmedinformdecismak.biomedcentral.com/counter/pdf/10.1186/s12911-025-02961-5.pdf VL - 25 SN - 1472-6947 ER -