Wellness
First Human Tests of Memory Boosting Brain Implant--a Big Leap Forward
"You have to begin to lose your memory, if only bits and pieces, to realize that memory is what makes our lives. Life without memory is no life at all." -- Luis Buñuel Portolés, Filmmaker Every year, hundreds of millions of people experience the pain of a failing memory. The reasons are many: traumatic brain injury, which haunts a disturbingly high number of veterans and football players; stroke or Alzheimer's disease, which often plagues the elderly; or even normal brain aging, which inevitably touches us all. Memory loss seems to be inescapable. But one maverick neuroscientist is working hard on an electronic cure.
Robots Are Here: Are We Ready?
Since the first computer-managed elements entered service in a General Motors auto manufacturing plant in 1961, almost every service and manufacturing industry in the world has benefited from increased automation provided -- to a greater or lesser degree -- by robotics. And, as industries become more deeply interconnected as a result of the demands of globalization and ubiquitous connectivity, so the very nature of robots will also evolve. However, increased proliferation of robots will bring as many new or accentuated risks as benefits, heightening the need for control over our creations. Today, there are many different types of robots in commercial and private use, with form factors varying considerably from the static to the fully mobile, from the microscopic to the truly huge and from the single function-specific design to the multi-function, modular types popularised by science fiction. Risks and threats posed by robots will also vary considerably.
You can now order Taco Bell via Slack without ever talking to a human
As if fast food couldn't get any faster, a new integration between Slack and Taco Bell is proving the impossible to be quite possible. Last week, the express joint announced a new partnership with the workplace messenger system, which allows taco fans to order menu items by way of an artificial intelligence powered customer service system named TacoBot. You'll be able to ask and even pay for your favorite menu items through Slack, all with via a "witty personality you'd expect from Taco Bell." The latest in a long list of integrations the IM system has introduced in the last several months, this one might be the most delicious, limited as it may be. While the Taco Bell menu available on Slack may not be quite as extensive as the one in the actual fast food restaurant, Lawrence Kim, Taco Bell's director of digital innovation, says this is just the beginning.
Who's Trying To Make Robots More Human? You'll Be Amazed
Absurdly Driven looks at the world of business with a skeptical eye and a firmly rooted tongue in cheek. One of humanity's greatest talents is its ability to self-destruct. In Silicon Valley, it's compulsory to call it disruption. You surely know that soon the world will be presided over by robots. They will think for us.
The funny things happening on the way to singularity
People often ask me about the impact of 3D printing on jobs. Will the technology be a job creator or destroyer? The short answer is, it will take more jobs than it makes -- and 3D printing is not alone. Technology will eventually make work obsolete. Our big problems are going to be figuring out how to survive the transition, then figuring out what to do with all that free time. About 10 years ago, inventor, futurist and now Director of Engineering at Google Ray Kurzweil famously embraced the concept of "the singularity" -- that moment in time when machine intelligence surpasses our own. Kurzweil predicted the singularity would occur by 2045, and man and machine would become inseparable.
Genome Medicine
Breast cancer is the most frequently diagnosed cancer in women worldwide excluding skin cancer and it is ranked second for deaths among cancer patients [1]. Early diagnosis of breast cancer is crucial for patient prognosis. Currently, however, clinically diagnosed breast tumors have a median size of 2 to 2.5 cm [2], which are likely to be later stage (stage III) breast tumors that have already metastasized to axillary lymph nodes. A highly accurate diagnostic test for breast cancer is currently lacking. The standard mammography test has sensitivities of merely 54 to 77 % [3].
AI, Analytics and the Future of Health Insurance
Before assessing the potential impact Artificial Intelligence can have in the health insurance industry, it's important to understand what the term "AI" really means. In general, AI refers to a series of algorithms that can collect, process and analyze data on their own, without being explicitly programmed, to make predictions and insights far beyond the capabilities of manual processing. Originally conceived back in the 1950's companies have been attempting to design and improve machine learning models for decades only to have seen little commercial success. But thanks to hardware advances and the emergence of big data analytics, companies are recognizing and taking advantage of the true power of AI. In the health insurance space, there are many opportunities where AI and analytics can be applied to increase organizational productivity and drive new competitive advantages in today's fast-paced and complex business environment. One of the channels to increase productivity is through improved fraud detection, which is a major issue in the health insurance industry.
The Robot Will See You Now: U of T experts on the revolution of artificial intelligence in medicine
Make room, stethoscope and otoscope. Artificial intelligence (AI) applications are increasingly among the physician's standard instruments,experts at the University of Toronto say. "With electronic records, you can use text algorithms to read a patient's history, review their genetic predispositions, and correlate the information to make predictions," says Dr. Frank Rudzicz. Rudicz is one of five experts exploring the issues of privacy, accuracy and accountability at The Robot Will See You Now – the Revolution in Artificial Intelligence and Medicine at U of T on April 5. A research scientist with the Toronto Rehab Institute and an assistant professor (status only) in the department of computer science at the University of Toronto, Rudzicz is also a project lead within a federally funded national research network in technology and aging known as AGE-WELL NCE.
Three Chinese restaurants fired their robot workers
According to observations from many of the human workers still employed by one such restaurant, the robots simply lacked the intelligence, artificial or otherwise, to effectively wait on guests. Of the three restaurants in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou that attempted the practice, only one remains open, and that eatery is now currently only using one of the robots it initially employed. One of the establishments employed as many as 10 robots at one time. The gimmick reportedly had some short-term benefit of driving customers through the door. However, those guests reportedly were just as quickly turned away by food that was generally considered "unpalatable" for guests, according to reports.
This 'Age Suit' Simulates What it's Like to Grow Old
The team of three so-called "suit wranglers" told me to relax as they strapped me into the contraption, but the heart rate monitor attached to my finger gave away the fact that I was a little uncertain as to what I had gotten myself into last week. "Do you normally have a high heart rate?" one technician inquired. During a visit to the Liberty Science Center in Jersey City last Thursday, I had happened across a preview of a new exhibit that was opening to the public the next day, Friday, April 1. The exhibit, The Genworth R70i Aging Experience, featured the just-unveiled Genworth R70i Age Suit – an augmented reality suit that simulates the sensory impairments that come as people age. The high-tech suit I was being strapped into was created by Applied Minds co-founder and inventor Bran Ferren, who partnered with Genworth Financial to create it with the goal of sparking a conversation among young people about aging and senior care.