The radiologist was dead.
Or at least that’s what artificial intelligence (AI) experts prophesized in 2016 when they said AI would outperform radiologists within the decade.
Today, AI isn’t replacing imaging specialists, but its use is leading health care providers to reimagine the field. That’s why UC San Francisco was among the first U.S. universities to combine AI and machine learning with medical imaging in research and education by opening its Center for Intelligent Imaging.
Take a look at how UCSF researchers are pioneering human-centered AI solutions to some of medicine’s biggest challenges.
Spot illnesses earlier
Tens of thousands of Americans suffer pneumothoraces, a type of collapsed lung, annually. The condition is …