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Forging trust in AI, sustaining the virtual care boom and other CES takeaways

Share it The status of health tech after the pandemic was a key topic of discussion last week at CES, one of the largest technology shows in the world. It usually pulls thousands of attendees to Las Vegas but went completely virtual this year due to COVID-19. Amid new product announcements from smart home tech to autonomous robots, one major theme was sustainability of the unprecedented acceleration in the telehealth industry. Another topic of debate was how virtual care is shifting from a one-to-one modality to a more comprehensive care model and what artificial intelligence designers can do to increase clinician trust in their diagnostic models.

At CES, experts say transparency key to ensuring AI tools work as intended

MedCity News At CES, experts say transparency key to ensuring AI tools work as intended AI tools increasingly occupy a regulatory gray area in healthcare. For clinicians to assess whether they are trustworthy, they need transparency on how they work, said panelists at CES. Shares0 A host of AI tools have been quickly developed to respond to the Covid-19 pandemic, from algorithms to screen lung x-rays for signs of Covid-19, to triage tools to predict which patients will become critically ill. But how do we know they are working as planned? Transparency in how these tools are developed and their intended use is critical, experts said at a virtual panel at CES.

Trustworthy AI has the ability to transform healthcare

Philips highlights central role of healthcare in the home at All-Digital CES 2021 | Releases | USA Edition – Latest News, Breaking News, Top News Headlines

Philips highlights central role of healthcare in the home at All-Digital CES 2021 | Releases | USA Edition – Latest News, Breaking News, Top News Headlines
explica.co - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from explica.co Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Iowa college athletes could make money under proposed NCAA rule change

Stephanie Herzog, a University of Iowa golfer, didn’t mention the UI or golf in her 2019 book of short stories. The 21-year-old accounting major from Minnesota self-published the book on Amazon, setting a print price of $1. Making money wasn’t the goal for Herzog, who wrote her first novel a clump of stapled papers with terrible spelling when she was 6. Herzog’s 2019 book, “Bent Perspectives: A Collection of Short Stories,” might have gone under the radar if one of her coaches had not promoted it on social media. “My coaches didn’t know that promoting it was a violation,” Herzog said. “I didn’t either.”

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