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STAT+: Why conversations around health AI may be evolving beyond hype
You’re reading the web edition of STAT’s AI Prognosis newsletter, our subscriber-exclusive guide to artificial intelligence in health care and medicine. Sign up to get it delivered in your inbox every Wednesday.
My phone blew up while I was on vacation last week: The Associated Press Stylebook announced “health care” should actually be one word, “healthcare.” STAT is still deciding which we should use. Which do you prefer? You can weigh in here.
(Will my newsletters technically be shorter if we switch to “healthcare”? Food for thought.)
Maybe now we can have a real conversation about AI in health care
In his recent video “The People Do Not Yearn for Automation,” The Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel explains “software brain” — thinking about the world as a series of databases that are easily manipulated to solve problems — and why that is creating a disconnect between the AI world and everyone else.
The AI world thinks that AI really can solve the world’s ills and thus anti-AI sentiment is just a marketing problem. But people who are trying to slow AI adoption have legitimate concerns about the tradeoffs and performance of the technology that software-brained people are dismissing, he says.