Worcester Business Journal

April 17, 2023

Issue link: https://nebusinessmedia.uberflip.com/i/1497035

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 11 of 23

12 Worcester Business Journal | April 17, 2023 | wbjournal.com FOCUS H E A LT H C A R E BY ISABEL TEHAN WBJ Staff Writer A rtificial intelligence technologies have the potential to reshape how diagnoses are made, if not revolutionize diagnostics in medicine. Already, technologies exist to streamline the diagnostic process and detect illness before a physician can. But the technology should not be fully relied upon just yet. "e algorithm can be only as good as the data that we give it," said Elke Rundensteiner, professor of comput- er science and founding director in data science at Worcester Polytechnic Institute. It's a mistake to think that technol- ogy immediately holds less bias than humans. Artificial intelligence pro- grams aren't developed in a vacuum: In medicine, they are fed thousands of data points from practitioners based on real data from real patients, and the AI learns to analyze based on data not always representative of diverse groups. Participation in clinical trials in medicine is not representative of all With the medical world on the cusp of an artificial intelligence revolution, researchers and clinicians are excited about the potential and wary of technology implicitly reliant on human bias 0 100 200 300 400 500 2017 '18 '19 '20 '21 Number of clinical trials 79 137 226 409 523 Increased trials Clinical trials related to artificial intelligence in the U.S. Source: U.S. National Library of Medicine At UMass Chan Medical School, Dr. Neil Marya is researching how to use artificial intelligence in diagnostics of certain cancers. PHOTOS | EDD COTE

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Worcester Business Journal - April 17, 2023