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Your health app may be failing you

FOX News

This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Quotes displayed in real-time or delayed by at least 15 minutes. Market data provided by Factset . Powered and implemented by FactSet Digital Solutions . Mutual Fund and ETF data provided by LSEG . Are bank text codes enough to protect you? You have a credit freeze; it still isn't enough Turning 65? Month-by-month plan to protect yourself China's AI growth is about'economic and political leverage,' Rep Hinson says Expert warns'red-green-green alliance' helping China gain AI edge AI's impact on jobs, economy debated as youth express growing fears Jury dismisses Elon Musk's lawsuit against OpenAI and Sam Altman China does not'innovate,' they'replicate': Former DHS spokeswoman Trump to press Xi to'open up' China as tech CEOs join key summit Kurt CyberGuy Knutsson lays out how to limit what health apps used by insurance companies can track about you, the user.


Fukushima town turns to esports as a health tool for the elderly

The Japan Times

The town of Ono, Fukushima Prefecture, and Fukushima Medical University have set on promoting elderly people's health using esports, a competition using computer games. They have been holding trial sessions since September by inviting people who are interested and analyzing the effects of gaming experience on cognitive functions. Based on the results of the assessments, they plan to set up gaming machines in meeting places and other locations so that elderly people can feel free to use them.


FDA Chief: AI Holds 'Enormous Promise' for Tomorrow's Health Care

#artificialintelligence

Digital health tools have and continue to radically change how care is delivered and provided, helping with early detection and cutting costs. Wearable devices, telemedicine and mobile apps already enable patients to be more proactive with their health, and help care providers better tailor individual care. "Artificial intelligence, particularly efforts to use machine learning . . . He spoke April 26 at the Health Datapalooza in Washington, D.C., organized by Academy Health. "We know that to support the widespread adoption of AI tools, we need patients and providers to understand the connection between decision-making in traditional health care settings and the use of these advanced technologies," Gottlieb said.


Depressed but can't see a therapist? This chatbot could help

Los Angeles Times

Fifty years ago, an MIT professor created a chatbot that simulated a psychotherapist. Named Eliza, it was able to trick some people into believing it was human. But it didn't understand what it was told, nor did it have the capacity to learn on its own. The only test it had to pass was: Could it fool humans? These days, with robotics advancing to drive cars, beat humans at chess and Go!, and replace entire workforces, Eliza's smoke and mirrors is child's play.


Depressed but can't see a therapist? This chatbot could help

Los Angeles Times

Pamela Fox, Woebot's chief technology officer, center, talks to Alison Darcy, Woebot's founder and chief executive, at the offices of the start-up in San Francisco. Pamela Fox, Woebot's chief technology officer, center, talks to Alison Darcy, Woebot's founder and chief executive, at the offices of the start-up in San Francisco. Fifty years ago, an MIT professor created a chatbot that simulated a psychotherapist. Named Eliza, it was able to trick some people into believing it was human. But it didn't understand what it was told, nor did it have the capacity to learn on its own.