this post was submitted on 13 Jun 2025
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[–] utopiah@lemmy.world 2 points 16 hours ago (1 children)

There are pretty great applications in medicine.

Like what? I discussed just 2 days ago with a friend who works in public healthcare, who is bullish about AI and best he could come up with DeepMind AlphaFold which is yes interesting, even important, and yet in a way "good old fashion AI" as has been the case for the last half century or so, namely a team of dedicated researchers, actual humans, focusing on a hard problem, throwing state of the art algorithms at a problem and some compute resources... but AFAICT there is so significant medicine research that made a significant change through "modern" AI like LLMs.

[–] Natanox@discuss.tchncs.de 7 points 12 hours ago (2 children)

What I heard so far was about advanced pattern recognition for scans (MRI, CT etc) to reduce oversights and in documents to detect potential patterns relevant for epidemologists (a use that's very controversial since it requires all medical documents of citizens to be centralized and available unencrypted). Also some scientists seem to praise purpose-built machine learning technology for specialised tasks (those are not LLMs though).

[–] OpenStars@piefed.social 5 points 10 hours ago

AI as in "Artificial Intelligence" has existed for decades and is quite useful - and specialized uses of LLMs can extend that. Although AI the buzzword for "generative intelligence" is new, and often wrong, being built to give the form of an answer rather than the reality of one.

[–] gmtom@lemmy.world 6 points 11 hours ago (1 children)

Yeah that's what I do for work, it can detect respiratory diseases or even tumours from scans long before even the best human doctor could do reliably, and our work has already saved hundreds of lives and we're still only just rolling it out. It's legitimately going to revolutionise medicine.

[–] Natanox@discuss.tchncs.de 3 points 11 hours ago (2 children)

Awesome, truly love to hear that. 🥰

Question out of curiosity, even though that isn't exactly what you're working on: Do you think the technology could eventually also be used to detect what might be referred to as "latent cancer cells", that can't be destroyed by the body but also didn't grow into tumors yet due to the body fighting it?

Asking because that's what happened to me years ago. Had high inflammatory markers for over 1.5 years with no doctors being able to tell what the heck was going on. Then one day an angry Lymphoma appeared that required 4 aggressive chemo cycles and 14 day radio to get rid off, even though it was stage 1. If AI tech could be able to detect those "latent cancer cells" (or some biomarkers caused by them) before tumors appear… that would be phenomenally awesome.

[–] gmtom@lemmy.world 1 points 3 hours ago

Honestly have no idea, I'm on the programming side, so don't really have much medical knowledge, but if I remember ill ask someone when I'm in the office on Wednesday.