detect covid-19
Revolution in Health Sector with AI Developments
Developments in Artificial Intelligence (AI) have taken the world by storm. Whether for military or civilian use, the hybrid character of AI has placed it in high demand. On the one hand, the world is witnessing an AI arms race to dominate adversaries, while on the other, AI is being used to serve humanity. The widespread applications of AI in various sectors such as health, education and agriculture etc. depicts its significance in the civil sector. Since AI is invisible to the human eye, it has induced changes in how the security landscape in particular is also adopting this technology.
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IIT researchers use AI to detect covid-19 through chest X-rays
A team of researchers at the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Jodhpur has developed a covid-19 diagnosis model by implementing artificial intelligence (AI) to chest X-ray scans. While this is not the first covid-19 diagnosis technique that uses chest X-rays to detect the presence of the Sars-CoV-2 infection in lungs, the researchers claim that their AI model is'explainable', and can accurately pinpoint the affected lung areas as a result of this infection. Called Comit-Net, the diagnosis process involves an AI algorithm that has been trained on a set of chest X-ray data. This is then applied to chest scans of lungs that have been affected by covid-19. According to the researchers, the key differentiating factor behind this method is the ability to single out the affected areas of lungs, which in turn can help in more effective medical treatments.
Pioneering AI technology can accurately detect Covid-19 in a few minutes
Pioneering Artificial Intelligence (AI) technology, developed by experts at University of the West of Scotland (UWS), is capable of accurately diagnosing Covid-19 in just a few minutes. The groundbreaking programme is able to detect the virus far more quickly than a PCR test; which typically takes around 2-hours. It is hoped that the technology can eventually be used to help relieve strain on hard-pressed Accident and Emergency departments, particularly in countries where PCR tests are not readily available. The state-of-the-art technique utilizes x-ray technology, comparing scans to a database of around 3000 images, belonging to patients with Covid-19, healthy individuals and people with viral pneumonia. It then uses an AI process known as deep convolutional neural network, an algorithm typically used to analyse visual imagery, to make a diagnosis.
Can you detect covid-19 using machine learning?
Technology advancements have a rapid effect on every field of life, be it medical field or any other field. Artificial intelligence has shown the promising results in health care through its decision making by analyzing the data. COVID-19 has affected more than 100 countries in a matter of no time. This will affect people all across the planet in the future. The development of a control system that can detect the coronavirus is critical.
India Develops AI tool to Detect COVID-19 in Chest X-rays
The Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) has developed an artificial intelligence algorithm that can detect the presence of the COVID-19 virus in chest X-rays. The AI tool, ATMAN AI, was developed by DRDO's Centre for Artificial Intelligence and Robotics (CAIR), with support from 5C Network & HCG Academics. Triaging using X-ray in COVID-19 diagnosis is a method for the rapid identification and assessment of the lungs, according to a statement issued by HCG Academics. The tool will be used by 5C Network, the country's largest digital network of radiologists, with the support of HCG Academics. Triaging potential patients using X-ray is fast, cost-effective, and efficient.
Non-invasive SKIN tests can detect Covid-19 with 83% accuracy
Covid-19 can be accurately detected by skin swabs rubbed on the face, neck or back, a study suggests. Currently, the only way to reliably detect Covid-19 is with highly-invasive swabs which go up the nose or to the back of the throat. But University of Surrey researchers say sebum -- a waxy substance made by glands in the skin -- is altered by the coronavirus and can therefore be used to detect signs of infection. Currently, the only way to reliably detect Covid-19 is with highly-invasive swabs which go up the nose or to the back of the throat. Sixty-seven hospitalised patients were recruited for the study between May and June 2020.
New app could detect Covid-19 from a cough with 98% accuracy
Scientists have created an algorithm that can accurately diagnose people with Covid-19 just by the sound of their cough. DeepCough, created by experts from the University of Essex, was built using 8,380 clinically-validated audio samples of people coughing. The samples were taken from hospitals in Spain and Mexico since April last year –2,339 who tested positive and 6,041 who tested negative for Covid-19. The researchers say the algorithm was able to detect with 98 per cent accuracy whether or not the samples were from people infected. Their algorithm would underpin an app that could herald a quicker, cheaper and less invasive way of preliminary testing for the virus, according to the experts. The two leading tests for detecting Covid-19 – antigen detection and PCR – involve swabs of bodily fluid, but the app could be rolled out for iOS and Android and potentially provide a way for people to self-diagnose.
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How artificial intelligence can transform airports for better public health
Technology is a double-edged sword. The same transportation technologies that improved travel efficiency and brought the world closer, have ironically facilitated the record-breaking spread of Covid-19 and in a way, driven people apart. In this modern day, it is easy for a person to traverse multiple continents within 24 hours, mixing with many people along the way during journeys. In hindsight, it is evident that disease prevention and pandemic management technologies were not developed with a consideration of the potential impacts that enclosed, heavily populated and constrained transportation vehicles might facilitate the communication of disease. We are in fact, still figuring this out.
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Now Artificial Intelligence Can Detect COVID-19 by Listening to Your Coughs
Coronavirus Latest Update: With asymptomatic people testing positive for coronavirus becoming a major cause of concern, researchers are finding a new way out to find if there are any indications in a human's cough that could detect COVID infection. Researchers have confirmed that an artificial intelligence (AI) tool that can detect if there are any indications in a human's cough that could point to a COVID infection, before seeking medical help and further testing. Also Read - Why Do Covid Patients Suffer From Fatigue, Lack of Breath For Long? Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) are saying that artificial intelligence (AI) tool can detect covid-19 through human's cough. According to their research studies, they say that people who are asymptomatic may differ from healthy people in the way that they cough and while differences are not decipherable to the human ear, AI can detect these. Moreover, the researchers are also working to make this tool available to users as an app.
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