Q&A: AI offers medical advice to clinicians like a colleague

Artificial intelligence has offered exciting new innovations for clinicians, but the next step may be AI communicating like clinicians, too.
Qian Yang, PhD, an assistant professor of information science at the Cornell Ann S. Bowers College of Computing and Information Science and co-founder of the digital and AI literacy initiative, and colleagues developed a system to help validate AI suggestions based on evidence from journals and clinical trials.
They then conducted a study that found if AI tools can communicate with the physician like a colleague — identifying and communicating

Artificial intelligence has offered exciting new innovations for clinicians, but the next step may be AI communicating like clinicians, too.
Qian Yang, PhD, an assistant professor of information science at the Cornell Ann S. Bowers College of Computing and Information Science and co-founder of the digital and AI literacy initiative, and colleagues developed a system to help validate AI suggestions based on evidence from journals and clinical trials.
They then conducted a study that found if AI tools can communicate with the physician like a colleague — identifying and communicating