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Released: 7-Mar-2023 9:00 AM EST
Join us at #DiscoverBMB 2023 for the latest molecular life sciences research
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (ASBMB)

Will AI drive the next biomedical revolution? Why is RNA so powerful? What can we learn from studying bias? You’ll get the answers to these questions and more at Discover BMB, the annual meeting of the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, to be held March 25–28 in Seattle.

Newswise: Chula’s AICute Innovation – An Assessment Tool for Ischemic Stroke Risk to Reduce Disability and Death
Released: 7-Mar-2023 8:55 AM EST
Chula’s AICute Innovation – An Assessment Tool for Ischemic Stroke Risk to Reduce Disability and Death
Chulalongkorn University

A research team from the Faculty of Medicine and Faculty of Engineering, Chulalongkorn University has jointly developed AICute, an innovative program to assess the chances of stroke caused by heart disease (Ischemic Stroke), aimed at helping hospitals that lack cardiologists to enhance the effectiveness of stroke treatment, reduce congestion in hospitals and medical schools.

Released: 7-Mar-2023 3:30 AM EST
Artificial Intelligence Proves to be an Effective Tool for Documenting Orthopaedic Encounters in Hand Surgery
American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS)

While Electronic Health Records improve access to patient information, charting increases the clerical burden on physicians as medical documentation has been identified as a contributing factor to burnout.

Released: 3-Mar-2023 2:15 PM EST
AI used to predict future flares of ulcerative colitis activity
University of Birmingham

Ulcerative colitis assessment could be improved after new research shows that an artificial intelligence model could predict flare-ups and complications after reading biopsies.

   
Newswise: JMIR Medical Education Launches Special Issue on the Use of ChatGPT in Medical Education, After New Study Finds ChatGPT Passes the United States Medical Licensing Examination
Released: 3-Mar-2023 1:50 PM EST
JMIR Medical Education Launches Special Issue on the Use of ChatGPT in Medical Education, After New Study Finds ChatGPT Passes the United States Medical Licensing Examination
JMIR Publications

A study published on February 8, 2023, in JMIR Medical Education, a leading open access journal on digital medical education, evaluated the potential of ChatGPT, a natural language processing model, as a medical education tool. The study found that ChatGPT reaches the equivalent of a passing score for a third-year medical student.

     
Newswise: Signals of the Future Detected by Artificial Intelligence
Released: 2-Mar-2023 8:25 PM EST
Signals of the Future Detected by Artificial Intelligence
National Research Council of Science and Technology

KISTI developed and released the findings on automated weak signal detection technology which uses data and algorithms to detect early signs of technology with potential for future growth last year. Weak signals- signals containing information about the future even though their significance remains yet to be seen in the present, are one way to explore technologies with potential for future growth.

Newswise: New Way to Predict the Damage and Aging of Bridges by Using D.N.A. Technologies
Released: 2-Mar-2023 8:00 PM EST
New Way to Predict the Damage and Aging of Bridges by Using D.N.A. Technologies
National Research Council of Science and Technology

The Korea Institute of Civil Engineering and Building Technology (KICT, President Kim Byung-Suk) announced that it has developed the D.N.A. (Data, Network, and AI) technologies to predict the levels of damage and aging of bridges for preventive maintenance.

Newswise:Video Embedded ai-based-prosthetic-socket-developed-to-help-thigh-amputees
VIDEO
Released: 2-Mar-2023 7:45 PM EST
AI-Based Prosthetic Socket Developed to Help Thigh Amputees
National Research Council of Science and Technology

The Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials (President Park Sang-jin, hereinafter referred to as KIMM), an institution under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Science and ICT, has succeeded in developing a smart, customizable prosthetic socket that automatically fills the socket with air upon detecting the empty space inside of the socket in real time based on artificial intelligence.

Newswise: Integrating humans with AI in structural design
Released: 2-Mar-2023 5:50 PM EST
Integrating humans with AI in structural design
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)

Modern fabrication tools such as 3D printers can make structural materials in shapes that would have been difficult or impossible using conventional tools.

Newswise: Argonne scientist develops new X-ray data reconstruction method
Released: 2-Mar-2023 4:40 PM EST
Argonne scientist develops new X-ray data reconstruction method
Argonne National Laboratory

A new software package developed by Argonne will help scientists reconstruct data from X-ray tomography experiments at the Advanced Photon Source up to 30 times faster than current methods.

Newswise: AI improving digestive cancer diagnosis, but data-sharing obstacles remain
Released: 2-Mar-2023 12:50 PM EST
AI improving digestive cancer diagnosis, but data-sharing obstacles remain
Health Data Science

Artificial intelligence is helping to deliver earlier and better diagnoses of digestive cancers, but many challenges remain to widespread clinical application, not least limited sharing of medical imaging data between hospitals, and lack of standardization of protocols for medical imaging for AI, a group of researchers has concluded after a comprehensive survey of recent applications of the technology to these most deadly of cancers.

   
Newswise: ‘Science on Saturday’ extends into March in Tracy, California
Released: 2-Mar-2023 12:00 PM EST
‘Science on Saturday’ extends into March in Tracy, California
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory’s popular outreach series, “Science on Saturday,” will continue its programming into March at the Grand Theatre Center for the Arts in Tracy, California.

   
Newswise: Lead-Isotope Computations Connect Physics from the Subatomic to the Cosmic Scale
Released: 2-Mar-2023 8:05 AM EST
Lead-Isotope Computations Connect Physics from the Subatomic to the Cosmic Scale
Department of Energy, Office of Science

Scientists used statistical tools, machine learning, and models run on supercomputers to explore nuclear force models. This allows scientists to make quantitative predictions about the structure of atomic nuclei and their interactions. Scientists used this approach to study the nucleus of lead-208 and predict its neutron skin. The results indicate the neutron skin is constrained by nucleon-nucleon scattering data.

Released: 1-Mar-2023 6:45 PM EST
AI draws most accurate map of star birthplaces in the Galaxy
Osaka Metropolitan University

Stars are formed by molecular gas and dust coalescing in space. These molecular gases are so dilute and cold that they are invisible to the human eye, but they do emit faint radio waves that can be observed by radio telescopes.

Released: 1-Mar-2023 3:20 PM EST
Tracking Trash: Researchers use aerial imaging to capture rapidly changing hurricane debris data
Florida State University

Juyeong Choi, an assistant professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering in the FAMU-FSU College of Engineering, will lead a $75,000 National Science Foundation-funded study examining debris collection and illegal dumping in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian, a Category 4 storm that hit southwestern Florida in 2022.

Newswise: Artificial Intelligence from a psychologist’s point of view
Released: 1-Mar-2023 1:20 PM EST
Artificial Intelligence from a psychologist’s point of view
Max Planck Society (Max-Planck-Gesellschaft)

Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics in Tübingen have examined the general intelligence of the language model GPT-3, a powerful AI tool.

Newswise:Video Embedded real-ai-will-need-biology-computers-powered-by-human-brain-cells
VIDEO
Released: 1-Mar-2023 1:15 PM EST
Real AI will need biology: Computers powered by human brain cells
Cortical Labs

The time has come to create a new kind of computer, say researchers from John Hopkins University together with Dr Brett Kagan, chief scientist at Cortical Labs in Melbourne, who recently led development of the DishBrain project, in which human cells in a petri dish learnt to play Pong.

Released: 1-Mar-2023 1:05 PM EST
Will you let a robot assist in surgery on you? The role of advertising in high-tech medical procedures
American Marketing Association (AMA)

Researchers from Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology and University of Texas at Dallas published a new Journal of Marketing article that examines whether direct-to-consumer advertising for robotics surgery is effective at swaying patients to choose it over other types of procedures.

   


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