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AI can speed up precision medicine, New York Genome Center-IBM Watson study shows

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The potential for artificial intelligence in precision medicine is big, according to conclusions of a new study by the New York Genome Center and IBM. The results, published in the July 11 issue of Neurology Genetics, a journal of the American Academy of Neurology, showed that researchers at the New York Genome Center, Rockefeller University and other institutions โ€“ along with IBM โ€“ verified the potential of IBM Watson for Genomics to analyze complex genomic data from state-of-the-art DNA sequencing of whole genomes. "This study documents the strong potential of Watson for Genomics to help clinicians scale precision oncology more broadly," Vanessa Michelini, Watson for Genomics Innovation Leader for IBM Watson Health, said in a statement. "Clinical and research leaders in cancer genomics are making tremendous progress towards bringing precision medicine to cancer patients, but genomic data interpretation is a significant obstacle, and that's where Watson can help." The proof of concept study compared multiple techniques used to analyze genomic data from a glioblastoma patient's tumor cells and normal healthy cells, putting to work a beta version of Watson for Genomics technology to help interpret whole genome sequencing data for one patient.


Jefferies gives IBM Watson a Wall Street reality check

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IBM's Watson unit is receiving heat today in the form of a scathing equity research report from Jefferies' James Kisner. The group believes that IBM's investment into Watson will struggle to return value to shareholders. In recent years, IBM has increasingly leaned on Watson as one of its core growth units -- a unit that sits as a proxy for projecting IBM's future value. In the early days, IBM's competitive advantage was its longstanding relationships with Fortune 500 companies. IBM Watson effectively operates as a consultancy where the company engages in high-value contracts with corporates to implement Watson technology for specific business cases.


How Much Artificial Intelligence Does IBM Watson Have?

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Watson started as a follow-on project to IBM DeepBlue, the computer and AI program that defeated world chess champion Gary Kasparov. DeepBlue demonstrated that a computer could defeat a human in chess, a game with well-defined rules and limited, fully visible solutions. The real world, however, is much more complicated: information often is unstructured, problems ill defined, and solutions probabilistic at best. To equip AI to deal with the real world, IBM challenged its computer and data scientists to create a program that could defeat human contestants at Jeopardy!, a quiz show requiring answers to natural language questions over broad domains of knowledge otherwise known as unstructured data. As a quick refresher, artificial intelligence can be divided into three categories, as shown above.1The


OpenText launches Magellan, an AI platform aimed at IBM's Watson ZDNet

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OpenText is launching an artificial intelligence platform called Magellan that hopes to use the company's knowhow with unstructured and semi-structured data and open source to compete with the likes of IBM Watson. At EnterpriseWorld, OpenText's conference in Toronto, the company outlined its artificial intelligence and machine learning platform. OpenText focuses on enterprise information management and has a portfolio that extends into content management for industries, customer experience, and data discovery. In January, OpenText completed the purchase of Dell-EMC's enterprise content unit, which includes Documentum. For the third quarter, Open Text reported revenue of $593 million, up 35 percent from a year ago.


OpenText Unveils AI Platform To Rival IBM Watson At A Fraction Of The Cost

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Not many tech CEO's have the bravado to stand before an audience of their most loyal customers and promise them a game-changing a product, claiming that it will blow a ground-breaking technology like IBM Watson away. But that is exactly what OpenText CEO Mark Barrenechea did just over a year ago. Today, standing before an audience of more than 5000 gathered at Enterprise World in Toronto, Barrenechea delivered the goods. OpenText Magellan is a cognitive computing platform that provides users with machine-assisted decision making, automation, and business optimization at a price they can afford. Magellan was built to deliver actionable insights and intelligence from big data, big content, information streaming from sensors, the Internet of Things and more.


Would You Drink a Cocktail Invented By a Computer?

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IBM's Watson computer has many talents. It discussed music with Bob Dylan, beat Ken Jennings at Jeopardy! and even ran a food truck. Now, the artificial intelligence project has picked up another skill: bartending. Working with foodies and chefs from Bon Apรฉtit magazine and the Institute of Culinary Education, IBM programmers put the software through culinary school. The project, known as "Chef Watson," generates original recipes based on ingredients a user selects, Christopher Trout writes for Engadget. "The system doesn't look at ingredients the same way chefs do," software engineer and chef Florian Pinel, who helped IBM develop Chef Watson, says in a video showcasing the cloud-based cook.


How IBM Watson is using AI technology in the health field

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Artificial-intelligence technology is all around us, in the form of voice assistants like Siri, Alexa, Cortana, and more. But this technology extends beyond recognizing a song or telling us the weather. At last year's Business Insider IGNITION conference, David Kenny, the general manager of IBM's Watson division, discussed the AI project. According to Kenny, Watson is most advanced in the health field. One example of its success potentially saved a life.


How Wimbledon is using IBM Watson's AI to power highlights, analytics and enriched fan experiences - Watson

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Key Points: โ€“ We're helping Wimbledon deliver new levels of engagement for ticket holders and 70 million online fans โ€“ Watson-powered real time match reports are expected to rival global outlets in breaking news and uncovering player insights โ€“ Watson Discovery Service is using 22 years of unstructured data to analyze an estimated 53,713,514 tennis data points โ€“ A voice-activated, watson-powered digital assistant "Fred," helps attendees find their way around the venue At the All England Lawn Tennis Club (AELTC), more than a half-million fans gather for the Wimbledon Championships every year. For two weeks in July, enthusiastic fans descend on the SW19 venue, with thousands of fans swarming onto the iconic Henman Hill to watch the tournament unfold. That's not including the more than 70 millions fans who watch the tournament online and on their televisions. All the fanfare isn't complete without the ongoing effort of the AELTC to enrich fan experiences through cutting-edge technology in new ways. For the 2017 Championships, IBM Watson is working with AELTC to deliver ticket holders and 70 million online fans with new levels of engagement and user assistance.


Tailored Bot Interactions Using IBM Watson โ€“ Chatbots Magazine

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What can bots do right now to make their user experience better than that of visiting a website? They can personalize the experience -- either with user context or AI. See, most sites try to appeal to the general user by splitting the homepage in one of two ways: by sales or by product category. They'd prominently display brands that have expressed their efforts in these areas -- like Nike or Yesah They have awesome watches, btw. This might be the case when choosing an outfit for a formal event.


A former Australian plumber just invented a $US179 earpiece that can translate 8 languages in real-time using IBM Watson

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An Australian startup revealed its flagship product, an earpiece that can interpret 8 different languages in real-time, at a United Nations event in Switzerland on Friday. Lingmo International, a startup based in West Gosford north of Sydney, launched its TranslateOne2One earpiece at the UN's Artificial Intelligence for Good Summit in Geneva, revealing that IBM Watson machine learning technology had been used for its algorithms. Traditionally, converting one language to another orally in real-time is called "interpreting" whereas the term "translation" is reserved for processing text across languages with some delay. Lingmo founder Danny May, however, describes his product as performing "translation in real-time". And what I mean by independent is that it doesn't require any connectivity to your phone by Bluetooth or wi-fi.