Brain scan and artificial intelligence could help predict whether OCD will improve with treatment

#artificialintelligence 

Spending so much time perfecting schoolwork that it never gets turned in. These are typical behaviors for people with obsessive compulsive disorder, or OCD, a lifelong illness marked by repetitive thoughts and actions that can seriously impair work performance, relationships and quality of life. OCD is most commonly treated with medication and a form of psychotherapy called cognitive behavioral therapy. Unfortunately, cognitive behavioral therapy does not help everyone with OCD, and the treatment can be expensive and time-consuming. Now, UCLA researchers have developed a way to use brain scans and machine learning -- a form of artificial intelligence -- to predict whether people with OCD will benefit from cognitive behavior therapy.

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