The bidirectional fragility index (bFI) for 2×2 contingency tables improves upon the unidirectional fragility index but retains significant structural limitations: (1) it restricts perturbations to within-arm toggles (fixed row margins), which is a subset of the full perturbation space; (2) it is mathematically incomplete (not attainable for some valid tables); and (3) it conflates classification stability with robustness. The Global Fragility Index (GFI) resolves the first two limitations by searching all cell-to-cell reallocations without fixing any marginal totals. Exhaustive enumeration of all valid 2×2 tables (N = 7–30, 45,230 tables) confirms that GFI ≤ bFI always, GFI < bFI in 21.5% of cases, and GFI is attainable for every table in the domain. The Risk Quotient (RQ) addresses the third limitation by providing a normalized robustness metric orthogonal to fragility. Citation: Heston TF. Bidirectional fragility is a step forward but not far enough: the case for a global fragility index. Internet Medical Journal. 2026;1:e19464166
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Thomas F Heston
University of Washington
Washington State University
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Thomas F Heston (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69e07d1d2f7e8953b7cbe15b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19561754