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Study finds artificial intelligence may help ease strain on hospitals - ET HealthWorld

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Washington: Researchers believe that developing cutting-edge artificial intelligence (AI) that can quickly and accurately identify lung diseases like pneumonia and tuberculosis could relieve the strain that winter months place on hospitals. Tuberculosis and pneumonia - potentially serious infections which mainly affect the lungs -often require a combination of different diagnostic tests,- such as CT scans, blood tests, X-rays, and ultrasounds. These tests can be expensive, with often lengthy waiting times for results. Developed by UWS, the revolutionary technology - originally created to quickly detect Covid-19 from X-ray images - has been proven to automatically identify a range of different lung diseases in a matter of minutes, with around 98 per cent accuracy. UWS researcher Professor Naeem Ramzan said: "Systems such as this could prove to be crucial for busy medical teams worldwide."


Study finds artificial intelligence may improve diabetes diagnosis

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Bethesda (Maryland) [US], April 16 (ANI): A new study has found that a fully-automated artificial intelligence (AI) deep learning model can identify early signs of type 2 diabetes on abdominal CT scans. The findings of the study were published in the journal, 'Radiology'. Type 2 diabetes affects approximately 13 per cent of all U.S. adults and an additional 34.5 per cent of adults meet the criteria for pre-diabetes. Due to the slow onset of symptoms, it is important to diagnose the disease in its early stages. Some cases of pre-diabetes can last up to 8 years and an earlier diagnosis will allow patients to make lifestyle changes to alter the progression of the disease.


Study finds artificial intelligence a "critical enabler" of energy transition

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Digital technologies and artificial intelligence (AI) in particular have tremendous potential to deliver the energy sector's climate goals more rapidly and at lower cost, according to a new study. As the impacts of climate change become more visible worldwide, governments and industry face the urgent challenge of transitioning to a low-carbon global energy system. The World Economic Forum's report highlights the technologies' potential to support the energy transition and advances a set of principles for the energy industry to deploy AI in a "safe, fair, and trustworthy way". Produced in collaboration with BloombergNEF (BNEF) and German energy agency Deutsche Energie-Agentur (Dena), Harnessing AI to accelerate the energy transition reviews the state of play of AI adoption in the energy sector. It also identifies high-priority applications of AI in the energy transition and offers a road map and practical recommendations for the energy and AI industries to maximise AI's benefits.