GoogleToday, the company announced a series of deployments in the healthcare industry AI ModelsAccording to the plan, Google's research team and Fitbit, which it owns, are developing a series of new artificial intelligence features:Extract data from wristbands and guide users' personal health, a tool powered by Google’s artificial intelligence model Gemini.
In addition, Google also announced a partnership with the Indian medical center Apollo Radiology International.Providing AI-powered tuberculosis, lung cancer, and breast cancer screening services in India.
In detail,Google claims to have developed an AI system to interpret chest X-rays to detect early signs of tuberculosisAI will enable more widespread screening and provide additional examinations to identify incidental nodules and perform necessary follow-up treatment. It is reported that this move is in response to the lack of trained radiologists in the local area and the inability of hospitals in rural areas to provide laboratory tests.
Apollo Radiology International will use these models to provide 3 million free AI-driven tuberculosis, lung cancer, and breast cancer screenings over the next 10 years.Helping hundreds of thousands of people in India get timely treatment.
Last week, Google began rolling out an artificial intelligence tool called MedLM to some of its cloud customers.Used in chest X-ray examinations to help doctors screen for surgery, radiology examinations and diagnosisThe company also announced that a specially customized version of its Gemini model scored 91.1% on a benchmark test based on the U.S. Medical Licensing Examination.
The new diagnostic conversational AI "AMIE" released by the Google DeepMind team defeated doctors in the test and passed the Turing test. AMIE uses a "self-game" method in a reinforcement learning algorithm, which can play against itself in a simulated environment and can expand learning in various diseases, medical specialties and environments through an automatic feedback mechanism.