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Thread: AI is your new master ....

  1. #326
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    <p>
    Eric Topol: The largest medical AI randomized controlled trial yet performed, enrolling &gt;100,000 women undergoing mammography screening, was published today. The use of A.I. led to 29% higher detection of cancer, no increase of false positives, and reduced workload compared with radiologists without A.I.. https://www.thelancet.com/journals/l...267-X/fulltext https://x.com/EricTopol/status/1886610132567777514</p>

  2. #327
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    For everyone testing AI against your specific knowledge base, would be good for you to state which model you're using. If it's ChatGPT, there are 7 models, some of which are pay only. It definitely matters.

  3. #328
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    AI replaced me posting here months ago - no complaints.

  4. #329
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    Quote Originally Posted by MultiVerse View Post
    Eric Topol: The largest medical AI randomized controlled trial yet performed, enrolling >100,000 women undergoing mammography screening, was published today. The use of A.I. led to 29% higher detection of cancer, no increase of false positives, and reduced workload compared with radiologists without A.I.. https://www.thelancet.com/journals/l...267-X/fulltext https://x.com/EricTopol/status/1886610132567777514
    I&#39;m intensely interested in how they will handle liability for mistakes with these AI systems if they try to move to justt having the AI read the images and sput out a result.

  5. #330
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    I would think AI would be good at reading xrays. That does not translate to other areas of medicine. One of the big issues is data input--consciously or subconsciously doctors entering items in the history and physical examination use terms that reflect what they already think is the diagnosis. If I think someone has appendicitis I would use different words than if I think they have a tummy ache.

  6. #331
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    Quote Originally Posted by muted reborn View Post
    AI replaced me posting here months ago - no complaints.
    Kind of an upgrade, really.

  7. #332
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    Quote Originally Posted by Utzi View Post
    Kind of an upgrade, really.
    Damn you.

  8. #333
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    https://sc.mp/7xv5o

    Sent from my Pixel 8 using Tapatalk

  9. #334
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    Quote Originally Posted by evdog View Post
    That one was pretty easy to predict.

  10. #335
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    Anybody else been playing with Sora? It's pretty fun to screw around with. I clearly need to learn how to get better at the prompts tho. Coming up with some comically bad (typical AI) stuff with my amateur understanding of how to work it.

    Sent from my Pixel 8 using TGR Forums mobile app

  11. #336
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    Quote Originally Posted by MultiVerse View Post
    <p>
    Eric Topol: The largest medical AI randomized controlled trial yet performed, enrolling &gt;100,000 women undergoing mammography screening, was published today. The use of A.I. led to 29% higher detection of cancer, no increase of false positives, and reduced workload compared with radiologists without A.I.. https://www.thelancet.com/journals/l...267-X/fulltext https://x.com/EricTopol/status/1886610132567777514</p>
    For what it is worth, I'm 95% sure that this is not using the LLMs that have generated the current AI hype train.

    Still cool, but they are almost certainly using neural networks/computer vision stuff that we would have just called "Machine Learning" as the hot buzzword had this paper come out in 2022.

    This is a very specific type of task with a clearly defined input and output so using specifically trained models makes a hell of a lot more sense than using a chatbot with non-deterministic results.

    I've been seeing this start to happen at work...people think AI can do everything and want the fancy AI solution, but it is not always the best tool for the job. More traditional statistical or machine learning models can make a lot more sense when you don't need "creativity" in your response. If you just want a standardized Yes/No/Maybe for a bunch of different (but similar) inputs...an LLM is maybe not useful (and far more costly to use).

  12. #337
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    Feb 2008
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    Self-checkout at the grocery store threw an error and I got the cashier over. He showed me that the checkout now has an overhead camera that showed my cart contents. I had an umbrella in there and the checkout thought I hadn't rung up everything. The cashier told it to ignore and it asked what the object was. He picked "personal belongings" from a list of options.

    So Kroger is building a machine vision database, pretty wild. Jokes on them if they sell umbrellas though

  13. #338
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    Mar 2022
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    Quote Originally Posted by dan_pdx View Post
    Self-checkout at the grocery store threw an error and I got the cashier over. He showed me that the checkout now has an overhead camera that showed my cart contents. I had an umbrella in there and the checkout thought I hadn't rung up everything. The cashier told it to ignore and it asked what the object was. He picked "personal belongings" from a list of options.

    So Kroger is building a machine vision database, pretty wild. Jokes on them if they sell umbrellas though
    At least it is actually the computer doing it, not just a bunch of people in India watching the cameras like Amazon was doing...

  14. #339
    Join Date
    Oct 2018
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    Machine Learning in mammography (called CAD for computer aided detection) goes back to the 1960s. It has been in the clinic since the 90s when it was FDA approved, and really took off with Medicare reimbursements in 2000 or so and eventually pretty much any decent size practice had it. It has actually fallen out of fashion over the last decade as it just gets in the way mostly.

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