Posts: 23
Threads: 2
Joined: Mar 2024
A group of scientists working within the Chinese Academy of Sciences has developed a new artificial intelligence tool based on Meta's AI model Llama 2.0. This AI, named "CARES Copilot 1.0," is specifically designed to assist brain surgeons. It will function as a kind of assistant for doctors and will be initially tested in seven different hospitals in China. If successful, the use of artificial intelligence will be expanded nationwide.
CARES Copilot 1.0 has been trained using over a million medical articles. As a result, this artificial intelligence can respond to questions posed by brain surgeons. Additionally, imaging techniques such as MRI, ultrasound, or CT scans can be analyzed by this AI. Brain surgeons will use this artificial intelligence for diagnosing diseases and obtaining assistance during surgeries. CARES Copilot 1.0 is designed to process both text and audio.
The artificial intelligence based on Llama 2.0 is backed by significant computational power. Approximately 100 GPUs were used for its training, with half being NVIDIA A100 and the other half Huawei Ascend 910B.
Read, learn and stay hard.
Posts: 441
Threads: 15
Joined: Sep 2023
 
That's good to hear on one side, and chaotic on the other.
Will be very helpful for surgeons, nothing beats the precision of AI.
Posts: 23
Threads: 2
Joined: Mar 2024
(03-12-2024, 08:43 AM)N1k7 Wrote: That's good to hear on one side, and chaotic on the other.
Will be very helpful for surgeons, nothing beats the precision of AI.
I am still skeptical about teaching AI medical processes and human biology in general. I find it a very dystopian idea as it may fall in the wrong hands but I guess it will regardless good guys do it or not.
Posts: 234
Threads: 2
Joined: Feb 2024
It will be really interesting to see this all implemented, but mistakes are going to happen.
This forum account is currently banned. Ban Length: (Permanent)
Ban Reason: Leeching | http://breached26tezcofqla4adzyn22notfqw...an-Appeals if you feel this is incorrect.
Posts: 83
Threads: 19
Joined: Jun 2023
I would be nervous about being operated on by an AI but at the same time I find it interesting ,I recently read about a new AI that could become the first software engineer, it's called Devin. Although it is still in the development stage, the potential it has is really fascinating.
This forum account is currently banned. Ban Length: (Permanent)
Ban Reason: Scraping | Contact us via https://breachforums.hn/contact if you feel this is incorrect.
Posts: 376
Threads: 14
Joined: Aug 2023
they already use robots in surgery it was just a matter of time. interesting to see how/where things go
Posts: 20
Threads: 0
Joined: Apr 2024
this sounds entirely fake and they are likely lying. if applied it would probably kill the patient
Posts: 6
Threads: 0
Joined: Apr 2024
AI is an interesting angle however very new. It may be used as support and considering it's principal of collective wisdom it's can be great assistant and advisor however it should not be given a front seat or driving position not untill we have tested and are sure about it. AI is very new and should only be taken as it is.
Posts: 27
Threads: 2
Joined: Apr 2024
This just sounds like a terrible idea. AI is barely reliable for basic tasks but how can they confidently use it in something like any surgery.
Thanks @Dev for the rank & pfp
Posts: 547
Threads: 22
Joined: Nov 2023
 
04-18-2024, 12:23 AM
(This post was last modified: 04-18-2024, 12:26 AM by baphometmahomet.)
(03-12-2024, 08:40 AM)yarakkafasi Wrote: A group of scientists working within the Chinese Academy of Sciences has developed a new artificial intelligence tool based on Meta's AI model Llama 2.0. This AI, named "CARES Copilot 1.0," is specifically designed to assist brain surgeons. It will function as a kind of assistant for doctors and will be initially tested in seven different hospitals in China. If successful, the use of artificial intelligence will be expanded nationwide.
CARES Copilot 1.0 has been trained using over a million medical articles. As a result, this artificial intelligence can respond to questions posed by brain surgeons. Additionally, imaging techniques such as MRI, ultrasound, or CT scans can be analyzed by this AI. Brain surgeons will use this artificial intelligence for diagnosing diseases and obtaining assistance during surgeries. CARES Copilot 1.0 is designed to process both text and audio.
The artificial intelligence based on Llama 2.0 is backed by significant computational power. Approximately 100 GPUs were used for its training, with half being NVIDIA A100 and the other half Huawei Ascend 910B.
It can be good for teaching and learning but not for actual surgeries
(03-12-2024, 08:40 AM)yarakkafasi Wrote: A group of scientists working within the Chinese Academy of Sciences has developed a new artificial intelligence tool based on Meta's AI model Llama 2.0. This AI, named "CARES Copilot 1.0," is specifically designed to assist brain surgeons. It will function as a kind of assistant for doctors and will be initially tested in seven different hospitals in China. If successful, the use of artificial intelligence will be expanded nationwide.
CARES Copilot 1.0 has been trained using over a million medical articles. As a result, this artificial intelligence can respond to questions posed by brain surgeons. Additionally, imaging techniques such as MRI, ultrasound, or CT scans can be analyzed by this AI. Brain surgeons will use this artificial intelligence for diagnosing diseases and obtaining assistance during surgeries. CARES Copilot 1.0 is designed to process both text and audio.
The artificial intelligence based on Llama 2.0 is backed by significant computational power. Approximately 100 GPUs were used for its training, with half being NVIDIA A100 and the other half Huawei Ascend 910B.
It's shocking how they would put a project thesis through plagiarism checks and a whole jury but would allow an underdeveloped machine to perform a doctor's job and provide assistance to a skilled professional for critical operations
|