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AI Medicine Technology

Google DeepMind's AI Beats Doctors at Spotting Eye Disease in Scan (cnet.com) 40

DeepMind, Google's artificial intelligence business, is planning clinical trials of technology that can help diagnose eye disease by analyzing medical images after early tests showed its results were more accurate than human doctors. From a report: Published in the scientific journal Nature, the study claims that DeepMind, in partnership with Moorfields Eye Hospital in London, has trained its algorithms to detect over 50 sight-threatening conditions to the same accuracy as expert clinicians. It is also capable of correctly recommending the most appropriate course of action for patients and prioritise those in most urgent need of care. In a project that began two years ago, DeepMind trained its machine learning algorithms using thousands of historic and fully anonymized eye scans to identify diseases that could lead to sight loss. According to the study, they can now do so with 94 percent accuracy, and the hope is that they could eventually be used to transform how eye exams are conducted around the world. You might be wondering why we need AI to do this job that has up until now been carried out by medical staff. But diagnosing eye diseases from ocular scans is incredibly time-consuming for doctors due to their complexity. Due to the aging global population, eye disease is also becoming more prevalent not less, increasing the burden on healthcare systems.
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Google DeepMind's AI Beats Doctors at Spotting Eye Disease in Scan

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  • by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Monday August 13, 2018 @11:35AM (#57116484)

    But it's great.

  • London so they have NHS unlike us where under the GOP system this can be used to quickly black list people.

    • by lgw ( 121541 )

      London so they have NHS unlike us where under the GOP system this can be used to quickly black list people.

      Sure - the NHS just blacklists you for being overweight or a smoker. It's a cheaper blacklisting system that avoids the costs of fancy US tests.

  • If it's hard for a human to see whether the scan shows signs of a disease waiting to happen, what was the AI trained by? And by whom? Do we know that the eye scans are actually relevant to the diseases? This is the part that always strikes me odd in those "humans have a hard time to notice X, so we train an AI to do it" stories. If humans have a hard time telling whether something is or is not relevant to a certain disease, and if the AI can only be trained by humans because there is no other source of info

    • by Anonymous Coward

      You feed the computer a bunch of scans and say "these patients ended up having XYZ disease". The diagnoses are determined later, sometimes much later. The doctor may not have initially diagnosed XYZ, but lo and beyond, 3 years later we know for sure the patient indeed has XYZ because by then the disease has progressed further and the diagnosis is clear. (Unfortunately for the patient, it may be too late to fully treat by then...)

      You feed the early scans, any intervening scans, and the final diagnoses to the

  • By itself, the statement "94% accuracy" means nothing - without an understanding of the rate of false positives and false negatives in the diagnoses. Because of the generally low incidence of the specific diseases in the general population, better than 94% accuracy could be easily achieved by a black box that says "healthy" with respect to all diseases to be diagnosed. Of course, such a black box is totally useless, though it certainly could "transform medical care"!

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I agree that it would be nice to see the actual numbers, but they said it performs better than human doctors. So I doubt it is a black box you described it could be.

  • Google beats doctor... but your doctor won't share your data with companies all over the web and start advertising to you based on what condition it discovers and trying to take advantage of you financially based on what ails you. (they will just milk you a bunch for your visit instead).

    • by dublin ( 31215 )

      This is one reason I won't have any Obamacare-compliant "health insurance" plan - I want control over my own health information, and expressly do not want it digitized or shared with anyone electronically, ever. (I've spent way too many years building and working with large-scale electronic medical records systems and healthcare networks to ever want my data in there...)

    • by Jahta ( 1141213 )

      Google beats doctor... but your doctor won't share your data with companies all over the web and start advertising to you based on what condition it discovers and trying to take advantage of you financially based on what ails you. (they will just milk you a bunch for your visit instead).

      That concern was touched on in the BBC report [bbc.com]. As it stands, this analysis requires the hospital to share patient data with Google. Many people will be understandably unhappy about that.

  • A few days after this post, IBM shows low promise of success using AI for medical diagnostic. Why such contrast?

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