Sunday morning. Welcome to it. Good morning. Im victor blackwell. This is cnn this morning. Good morning. Im amara walker. Thank you for sharing a part of your day with us. We have a lot of stuff to talk about. Interesting stuff, sports, news. Right now make or break for the u. S. Womens soccer team. All eyes are on team usa as they face off against sweden. We will have the latest on the game. And simone biles is back. 26yearold makes her comeback and qualifies for National Championships after a twoyear break. We will have highlights. And the back and forth legal fight between former President Donald Trump and the Special Counsel. It comes as truck unleashes his sharpest attack yet against his own Vice President. And a suspect charge inside the fatal stabbing of a professional dancer in new york. Right now, it is whin or go home for the u. S. Womens soccer team at the world cup, taking on sweden in the round of 16 in melbourne. The u. S. Is the Number One Team in the world but have not
the american girl who turned four in captivity. it s like a dream come true. because we were in a nightmare. norah: and in the west bank, crowds of palestinians gather to greet released prisoners. the suspect of the shooting of three students of palestinian dissent pleads not guilty as we learn more about the victim s injuries. it s a real tragedy, for the nation, not just these boys. norah: a major recall to tell you about. the seat belt issue forcing honda to recall hundreds of thousands of vehicles. what drivers need to know. how busy a cyber monday for amazon? it s like our super bowl. we practiced for months in advance. we are at an amazon r&d facility we will show you what the future of shopping looks like. what is a second? with that ai mark, that might really be something. norah: in the fight against breast cancer, how artificial intelligence could help. ai might have saved this woman s life. norah: good evening to our viewers in the west, an
of reading mammograms was done with two radiologists. what they found is that in the group supported by a.i., for every 1,000 women screened, six cases of breast cancer were detected compared with five for the standard way of doing this. they found also that the artificial intelligence supported screening did not find more false/positives or cases where it detected cancer that wasn t there. that s good news as well. another really important thing here is that they found that the artificial intelligence supported screening could reduce the workload for radiologists by 44%. now, that s based on the fact in europe it s standard for two raid olgists to look at a mammogram, whereas, in the united states, that s not the standard. there might not be such a strong reduction in the u.s., but still there is a hope this could help with a shortage of radiologists which is expected to get worse as the population worse.
i remember standing in the mirror one day with a ripped tank top and could clearly see one breast was larger than the other. reporter: she went to her doctor and not one, but two mammograms showed everything was fine. they said it wasn t cancer. reporter: but sours pushed her doctors to keep looking and they did an mri. almost the whole breast lit up. reporter: cancer all over her left breast and the mammograms had missed it. if everybody got mammography according to current standards, still have 35 to 40,000 women dies every year. it s not perfect. reporter: one reason is that reading mammograms can be very subjective. one radiologist versus another, you may have one who sees something or one who doesn t. reporter: but it s 2022 and computers can riead mammograms