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Transcripts for BBCNEWS BBC News 20240604 05:14:00

after their car became submerged in water. it happened on saturday in the early afternoon near grimsby and the mouth of the river humber. police say there was a collision and a blue mercedes 300 left the road. a 16 year old boy and a ao year old man were pronounced dead at the scene. their next of kin have been informed. transport for london says there will still be some disruption to tube services this morning despite the rmt union calling off a planned strike. london underground workers had been due to walk out for five days. the union said positive discussions meant further talks could take place. the pioneering british surgeon, professor sir roy carne, has died at the age of 93. he carried out europe s first liver transplant operation in 1968. sir roy was regarded as a world leading surgeon, working at addenbrooke s hospital in cambridge. he was the first to use drugs to control the rejection of donated organs. more of donated organs. details on our website.

Transcripts for BBCNEWS BBC News 20240604 02:20:00

radiotherapy is a life saving treatment for cancer patients, but before machines like this can start to shrink tumours, there s a laborious task for doctors. well, you can actually see here. the radiation target needs to be precisely mapped. medics want to avoid weakening bones or damaging organs. so, somehow, we ve got to kind of avoid dose from each of these areas. if we weaken these bones. carefully plotting each area typically takes between 25 minutes and two hours per patient. it s time medics could spend getting through a backlog or supporting families. so researchers at microsoft have spent more than a decade thinking about how artificial intelligence could take on that work. what ai can truly help with is really reducing the burden that s placed on clinicians. that was the model that we collaborated on. aditya s team worked with doctors at addenbrooke s hospital in cambridge, who further trained and evaluated their code on real patients

Transcripts for BBCNEWS BBC News at One 20240604 12:20:00

that was the model that we collaborated on. aditya s team worked with doctors at addenbrooke s hospital in cambridge, who further trained and evaluated their code on real patients including frank, who was diagnosed with prostate cancer. the people who are looking at this stuff all day long must get quite tired. whereas a computer, it doesn t get tired, itjust keeps doing it. how did it feel to be part of something like that? to be part of a trial? a privilege, i suppose. yeah, a privilege. doctors still check and sign off the ai s work, but in tests they found two thirds of the time, medics didn t feel the need to make any changes. actually, what we found - is that our consultant colleagues preferred to start with the work of the ai than even the work. of their consultant colleagues, which is quite interesting. - the ai is consistent. it doesn t get tired or have its own way of doing things, and raj and his team are now about to give their programme for prostate and head and neck can

Transcripts for BBCNEWS Verified Live 20240604 16:43:00

it s time medics could spend getting through a backlog or supporting families. so researchers at microsoft have spent more than a decade thinking about how artificial intelligence could take on that work. what ai can truly help with is really reducing the burden that s placed on clinicians. that was the model that we collaborated on. aditya s team worked with doctors at addenbrooke s hospital in cambridge, who further trained and evaluated their code on real patients including frank, who was diagnosed with prostate cancer. the people who are looking at this stuff all day long must get quite tired. whereas a computer, it doesn t get tired, itjust keeps doing it. how did it feel to be part of something like that? to be part of a trial? a privilege, i suppose. yeah, a privilege. doctors still check and sign off the ai s work, but in tests they found two thirds of the time, medics didn t feel the need to make any changes. actually, what we found - is that our consultant colleagues

Transcripts for BBCNEWS The Context 20240604 19:48:00

radiotherapy is a life saving treatment for cancer patients. but before machines like this can start to shrink tumours, there s a laborious task for doctors. well, you can actually see here. the radiation target needs to be precisely mapped. medics want to avoid weakening bones or damaging organs. so, somehow, we ve got to kind of avoid dose from each of these areas. if we weaken these bones. carefully plotting each area typically takes between 25 minutes and two hours per patient. it s time medics could spend getting through a backlog or supporting families. so researchers at microsoft have spent more than a decade thinking what ai can truly help with is really reducing the burden that s placed on clinicians. that was the model that we collaborated on. aditya s team worked with doctors at addenbrooke s hospital in cambridge, who further trained and evaluated their code

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