artificial intelligence make
Artificial intelligence makes its way into health care on the Central Coast
Tenet Health Central Coast is now using new technology in conjunction with an application that will help health workers diagnose and respond more quickly to patients suffering from a stroke. The application, called Viz.ai, is used by the stroke response team at Tenet Health Central Coast hospitals. The application uses artificial intelligence technology to send an instant chat to the stroke response team, saving five steps during the initial response to a stroke after a patient undergoes a CT scan. Viz.ai uses advanced imaging technology to automatically analyze CT perfusion images of the brain. Those images produce parametric color maps and calculate CT perfusion parameters that then notifies the neurologist of the diagnosis.
- Health & Medicine > Health Care Providers & Services (0.99)
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area > Neurology (0.87)
Will artificial intelligence make us smarter or dumber? It's up to us.
Artificial intelligence (AI) language models like ChatGPT, BLOOM, and OPT-175B are a hot topic of conversation in academic circles. What are they? Should they be allowed in educational settings? Will they make us dumber? Will their use lead to widespread cheating? Can we use them to promote critical thinking and writing skills? How? To answer these questions, let's ask ChatGPT.
- Education > Educational Technology (0.48)
- Education > Educational Setting (0.37)
- Health & Medicine > Nuclear Medicine (0.85)
- Media > News (0.71)
- Health & Medicine > Diagnostic Medicine > Imaging (0.40)
Artificial intelligence makes its mark on BGSU, leaves door open for future
The United Nations' High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet is lobbying for a temporary suspension on usage and sale of Artificial Intelligence systems, according to National Public Radio. BGSU's campus is no stranger to this branch of computer science, as it is seeing integration of new artificial intelligence products in the form of Starship Robots, and may very well be home to more advanced tech in the coming years. Bachelet's request comes in response to a United Nations report out of Geneva detailing unaddressed risks of AI. The field of AI was formally founded at Dartmouth College in 1956. It is commonly defined as the ability of machines to self-learn, without explicitly being programmed to do so.
Combating Cybersecurity Threats Using Artificial Intelligence
Cybercriminals are no longer a threat to be taken lightly in today's world. Each year, data theft affects more than a hundred thousand people. Unfortunately, this number is rising despite the availability of effective cybersecurity measures. In this particular context, how can AI play a role in improving cybersecurity? Many businesses and individuals are rushing to refresh their systems and protect their data. Due to the dramatic increase in threats, the need for security checks has increased.
- Information Technology > Security & Privacy (1.00)
- Government > Military > Cyberwarfare (1.00)
Artificial intelligence makes it faster, easier to analyze hockey video
Researchers have made a key advancement in the development of technology to automatically analyze video of hockey games using artificial intelligence. Engineers at the University of Waterloo combined two existing deep-learning AI techniques to identify players by their sweater numbers with 90-per-cent accuracy. "That is significant because the only major cue you have to identify a particular player in a hockey video is jersey number," said Kanav Vats, a Ph.D. student in systems design engineering who led the project. "Players on a team otherwise appear very similar because of their helmets and uniforms." Player identification is one aspect of a complicated challenge as members of the Vision and Image Processing (VIP) Lab at Waterloo work with industry partner Stathletes Inc. on AI software to analyze player performance and produce other data-driven insights.
How Artificial Intelligence makes your phone better (video & podcast)
If you've been using smartphones for the past quinquennial or even more, you'll understand exactly where this is coming from. I'm sorry, but if you're on your first or second smartphone, you were already born into this to begin with. You see, going back in time all the way to the Nokia 808 PureView, it was the phone that revolutionized smartphone photography. It was the first mobile device on the market with a whopping 40MP camera sensor. The Nokia Lumia 1020 followed, with the same size sensor and Zeiss lens.
- Information Technology > Communications > Mobile (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence (1.00)