Industry Watcher’s Digest
Buzzworthy developments of the past few days.
- Federal workers: Don’t go out and just buy AI. The White House is urging officials at executive-branch departments and federal agencies to get involved early—and stay involved indefinitely—in AI acquisition processes. The instruction, voiced in a memo sent by Shalanda Young, director of the Office of Management and Budget, ties to OMB’s desire to make sure AI-adopting agencies “are able to identify and manage privacy risks and ensure compliance with law and policy.” That’s just a taste of one guideline in a document detailing many. “The adoption and scaling of innovative techniques and technologies enables the acquisition workforce to execute agency missions more efficiently with increased customer satisfaction, better performance and lower cost,” the memo states. Fact sheet here, full memo here.
- Public interest is piqued over AI-aided cancer detection. That’s the case in Kentucky, where the technology is in the news. The technology “really allows us to have an extra set of eyes on [mammography images], so that we’re not missing critical findings, Sohail Contractor, MD, chair of radiology at the University of Louisville, tells TV station WDRB. “I think over the next five to 10 years the technology will take off really well. It’s very promising.”
- No continent stands to benefit more from the rise of AI in healthcare than Africa. So states Jennifer Lotito, president and COO of (Red), the AIDS-busting organization co-founded by U2 singer Bono. “AI will play a key role in helping empower this population and strengthen healthcare systems,” Lotito writes in a piece published by Forbes. This “could be a game changer for the global AIDS fight.”
- Noise complaints. Pet control calls. Requests for trash pickup. All fine examples of non-emergency situations for which many Americans reflexively dial 911. Do that in Fairfax County, Va., and your call may be taken by an AI bot. “Handling all types of calls has an impact on the call takers’ mental health,” a local official tells WTOP Radio, which reaches Greater Washington, D.C. “They can transition from walking someone through administering CPR to taking a call about someone complaining about a neighbor’s grass. It does take a toll.” The hope is that the AI system will head off long wait times and help focus human attention on actual emergencies.
- Meanwhile police are using AI chatbots to draft incident reports. The cops love it. Why wouldn’t they? They didn’t choose their line of work because they enjoy doing documentation. However, some prosecutors, police watchdogs and legal scholars “have concerns about how AI could alter a fundamental document in the criminal justice system that plays a role in who gets prosecuted or imprisoned,” NBC News reports. And as warned by the CEO of the company that sells the product: You “never want to get an officer on the stand who says, ‘Well, I didn’t write that—the AI did.’”
- Conduct a podcast without speaking a word. All you need is Google’s new AI podcasting tool, Audio Overview. Part of the company’s established research assistant NotebookLM, the podcast helper lets you upload all sorts of content and then type in some questions. The output is a weirdly human-sounding podcast called Deep Dive. The “humans” are the disembodied voices of a man and a woman. The two hosts interrupt one another, utter uncannily lifelike idioms and exclamations, and otherwise make your jaw drop. All while helpfully informing your podcast’s listeners. MIT Technology Review explains how it works and offers a sample here.
- Across the pond, a new effort to speed approvals of emerging technologies for healthcare. And other sectors. British science and technology minister Peter Kyle says the new Regulatory Innovation Office, aka “RIO,” will “curb the burden of red tape so businesses and our public services can innovate and grow, which means more jobs, a stronger economy.” More here.
- Recent research in the news:
- Walter Reed Army Institute of Research: Army researchers take aim at sepsis in burn patients using AI machine learning
- University of Houston: Artificial intelligence drives development of cancer fighting software
- University of Pennsylvania: Revolutionizing cardiovascular risk assessment with AI
- Technical University of Valencia: Large artificial intelligence language models, increasingly unreliable
- Walter Reed Army Institute of Research: Army researchers take aim at sepsis in burn patients using AI machine learning
- Funding news of note:
- From AIin.Healthcare’s news partners: