Is artificial intelligence really a future trend in health care?

Everyone who uses any digital platform in the daily routine has already been surprised by some sudden ad or product advertisement about which some information has been sought on the Internet. Coincidence? Of course not! This is just one example of how artificial intelligence is inserted into our dai...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brazilian dental science 2021-07, Vol.24 (3)
Hauptverfasser: Almeida Rodrigues, Jonas, Dias Pereira dos Santos, Henrique
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Everyone who uses any digital platform in the daily routine has already been surprised by some sudden ad or product advertisement about which some information has been sought on the Internet. Coincidence? Of course not! This is just one example of how artificial intelligence is inserted into our daily lives. It is in the platforms for music streaming, movies, shopping for any product, in traffic applications, in the stock market. Each "like", each share, each post shows a pattern of consumer preference, a characteristic that can be used to direct advertisements in order to advertise or market a product to a specific target. This is already happening, it is not part of the future. Artificial intelligence is already part of our present.   But how do these platforms manage to "guess" our preferences or tastes and hit exactly what we were looking for? In reality nothing is guessed, it is learned. Through computer modeling, these systems learn from the examples that we ourselves give them. We feed these systems on a daily basis. Just like children, who learn many things by example (languages, for instance) before they even go to school, these systems are also capable of learning. A child learns that a dog is different from a cat when it sees examples of several dogs and several cats. So a child can learn the differences between both animals. Algorithms learn the same way, through examples. This is what we call "machine learning," a sub-area of artificial intelligence (AI). It is an advance for society, but it must be applied with ethics and transparency (see the Netflix documentary Coded Bias).   Moving away from the market sphere and thinking about health care, machine learning has also been widely employed, because these systems have the ability to learn using endless amount of patient and hospital data (Big Data). In this sense, AI-based systems have been developed aiming at improving patient care, from the organization of triage systems at clinics and hospitals, patient scheduling, organization of test result delivery, preventing errors in drug prescriptions, as well as predicting and assisting in disease diagnosis. The artificial intelligence literature in the medical field is already vast. In dentistry, research has focused on the use of convolutional neural networks (CNN) in dental radiology. Tools are produced for researchers and system developers that aim at assisting clinicians in imaging diagnosis, for example, of dental caries, periapical lesions, b
ISSN:2178-6011
2178-6011
DOI:10.14295/bds.2021.v24i3.3108