above excerpt
How an AI Scientist Turned Her Breast Cancer Diagnosis Into a Tool to Save Lives
When artificial intelligence researcher Regina Barzilay was first diagnosed with breast cancer in 2014, she says she was struck by immediate questions: "Am I going to survive? What's going to happen to my son?" But soon, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology scientist began asking a broader one: Why couldn't her cancer have been diagnosed earlier? Barzilay's quest to find an answer would lead to a remarkable result: the development of an AI-based system for early detection of breast cancer, with the ability to predict whether a patient is likely to develop the disease in the next five years. A technology that had not yet penetrated the hospital setting now has the potential to save many thousands of lives each year.
- North America > United States > Massachusetts (0.27)
- Asia > China (0.06)
Could the Rise of Artificial Intelligence Put Truckers' Jobs in Peril?
Self-driving trucks may have once seemed like a futuristic vision. But in recent years, they've begun taking to the road -- and their implications for the labor market, and long-haul truck drivers in particular, could be enormous. In the above excerpt from the new FRONTLINE documentary In the Age of AI, meet the young CEO of a self-driving truck company whose vehicles are already delivering freight from California to Arizona; an independent trucker and his wife whose livelihood could be threatened by the new tech; and a sociologist and author who's been studying the forces reshaping the trucking industry. Among them: the rise in automation, some forms of which are powered by AI -- including self-driving trucks. "The trucking industry is $740 billion a year … in many of these operations, labor's a third of that cost," Steve Viscelli, author of The Big Rig, tells FRONTLINE in the above excerpt from the film.
- North America > United States > California (0.26)
- North America > United States > Arizona (0.26)