(NEW YORK) Google is expanding use of its health care artificial intelligence, including helping detect diseases, such as cancer, earlier and answering medical questions. During the technology company's annual The Check Up event on Tuesday, employees announced several new updates and partnerships that they claim will help expand access to care and make the field
Google is expanding its health care AI including partnerships to detect diseases sooner, answering medical questions and helping people find free and low cost care.
Google has built an AI that can answer medical questions. However, it's not as good as a human doctor and the company says it cannot yet perform safely in the real world
Artificial intelligence has huge potential for many healthcare challenges – but there are still many hurdles that must be overcome.
At a keynote for the Association for Computing Machinery Conference on Health, Inference and Learning this past week, Dr. Alan Karthikesalingam, research lead at Google Health UK, described three myths commonly encountered in the path to building and translating AI models in clinical settings.
When it comes to implementing deep learning technology, he asked: Why is there a gap between expectations and reality?
Here are three common misconceptions Karthikesalingam said must be addressed.
1. More data is all you need for a better model.