What ’s Next For ChatGPT In Healthcare?

You have probably heard that ChatGPT has recently passed business, law and medical exams, qualified as a level-3 coding engineer at Google (with a $180K starting salary!), outperformed most students in microbiology and checked a passable grade in a 12th-grade AP literature test.  Of course, better take these results with a pinch of salt. Although the algorithm indeed did reasonably well on the USMLE test, it was not a full-value assessment as all questions requiring visual assessment were removed. Pinch of salt or not, however, it is obvious how the capabilities of these large language models have been expanding and how far they have travelled. So what’s next? What will the new reality with smart AI at our fingertips look like? 1. AI tools will not be credited as authors in scientific publications As of now, large language models will not become co-authors of scientific publications as they can’t take responsibility for their work – this is the ruling by Springer, the world’s largest academic publisher. It doesn’t mean that such tools will not be used, thus we should move in a direction when authors declare what kinds of AI tools were used in exactly what ways in the methods/acknowledgements sections of publications.  2. Medical alternatives of ChatGPT will arrive As large language models develop, we will soon meet ones that were specifically designed for medical use. Google’s MedPaLM is an early example, and I expect that not on...
Source: The Medical Futurist - Category: Information Technology Authors: Tags: Artificial Intelligence in Medicine Source Type: blogs