AI that knows you're sick before you do: IBM's five-year plan to remake healthcare ZDNet
A silicon wafer designed to sort particles found in bodily fluids for the purpose of early disease detection. A chip that can diagnose a potentially fatal condition faster than the best lab in the country, a camera that can see so deeply into a pill it can tell if its molecular structure has more in common with a real or counterfeit tablet, and a system that can help identify if a patient has a mental illness just from the words they use: IBM is betting that a mix of AI and new hardware can make all three possible within the coming years. IBM's research labs are already working on turning these concepts into fully-fledged healthcare tools, combining the company's existing machine learning and artificial intelligence systems with newer kit including revamped silicon and millimetre wave phased array sensors. Playing House: How IBM's Watson is helping doctors diagnose the most rare and elusive illnesses Marburg Hospital's Centre for the Rare and Undiagnosed Diseases is using the cognitive computing system to solve some of the most complex medical cases. The latter will be used in'hyperimaging systems' -- tools that will be able to pick up not only images from the visible light that humans can see, but other parts of the electromagnetic spectrum that we can't.
Feb-1-2017, 17:55:20 GMT