Google's Deepmind division and the UK's NHS are teaming up to fight blindness with machine learning
A new Guardian report shows where AI is headed next, in a joint venture between Google's Deep Mind and the British NHS … The British team behind Google's AI efforts is teaming up with the UK's National Health Service and London's Moorfields Eye Hospital to build a machine learning system capable of recognizing potentially sight-threatening conditions by simply identifying symptoms from a digital scan of the eye. The core of the research will see about a million eye scans (all coming from anonymous patients) being analysed by an AI-fuelled computer, which Deepmind researchers will use to train a special algorithm. The algorithm will then allow the machine to spot early signs of eye conditions, such as wet age-related macular degenerations and diabetic retinopathy; diabetes, in fact, apparently makes it "25 times more likely to go blind", as per Mustafa Suleyman, Deepmind's co-founder. "If we can detect this, and get in there as early as possible, then 98% of the most severe visual loss might be prevented," Mustafa said. And indeed, allowing a computer to do most of the hard work would help immensely in increasing both the speed and the accuracy of a diagnosis, potentially helping the sight of thousands to be saved.
Jul-5-2016, 12:50:48 GMT