AI seems to be pretty popular these days and there are many applications in our daily life. But are there any AI designed to help our researchers to solve any biology questions?
hello, thank you for your important question. I would suggest that the quicker we identify a person who has cancer, the less severe the treatment has to be to contain the spread. Radiology does not produce high enough quality images of the internal human body. The human eye might not be capable of digesting every detail. Therefore tools are needed to examine the way that blood moves through the body. Sonographs using seismatic technologies measures geological shifts. We can now detect solar flares to predict if they would cause disruptions to our satelites and other telecommunications equipment even if the activity occurs on the part of the sun away from us. We should take this same technology and use it not to produce images but to detect differences between where our internal organs are and where they are predicted to be over a time lapse. These changes can be gathered through computer vision tools in combination with processing frameworks such as Tensorflow and Torch in data structure called tensors. By inspecting, predicting, reinspecting, and measuring differences of our expected trajectory with the objects we can gather indights as to suble gravitational shifts. This can be small but considering this is how we discover planets.
AI systems are concerned with data accumulation and converting them to information. As in case of cancer the the manual controls of radiotherapy might not be that helpful as is AI. AI regulates the radiations by using the sensors etc. While the human eye might not be able to digest the whole material we assign these tasks to AI. Which analyzes the results and provides you with the results ( that are accurate) For example the X-ray report exam by a human isn't that accurate as compared to an AI system