Medical
Government tech tsar warns of AI cyber threat to NHS
Ian Hogarth, the government’s new AI tsar, has warned that artificial intelligence could be used by cyber criminals to attack NHS.
Where is technology taking us?
In a world shaped by modern technology, from the Internet to the rise of artificial intelligence (AI), our lives have become entwined with innovation. Juan Garzón Vela, Founder and CEO at Cultzyme, further explores.
UK COVID drug development facility granted £500m upgrade fund
The science facility which kickstarted the UK’s world leading COVID drug development and has advanced treatments of global health challenges from HIV to malaria and cancer will be upgraded and expanded through a more than £500m investment, Science and Technology Secretary Michelle Donelan has announced.
Cameras play a crucial role in advancing medical diagnosis
Microscopic-based diagnostic devices are critical, but they come with many imaging challenges.
AI gives paralysed women a voice
A new Brain Computer Interface (BCI) has granted the power of speech to a patient with severe paralysis following a brainstem stroke.
Care robots: ethical perceptions and acceptance
Researchers develop a model that can explain the effect of users’ ethical perception on their willingness to use care robots.
Wearable AAC devices are set to transform communication support
Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC) devices play a critical role in empowering individuals with language impairments to communicate effectively.
Modified VR technology can measure brain activity
Scientists have adapted a commercially available virtual reality headset, enabling it to gauge brain activity and investigate responses to cues, stressors, and external stimuli.
Wearable ultrasound scanner could detect breast cancer earlier
This device, designed to be integrated into a bra, enables more frequent monitoring of patients with a high risk of breast cancer.
Lessons for safe and effective adoption of AI in healthcare
Artificial intelligence-based healthcare technologies have great potential to transform health outcomes and the UK’s healthcare system, but there are currently barriers to their adoption and scaleup, and risks that must be managed, according to a report of a FORUM workshop hosted jointly by the Academy of Medical Sciences and the Royal Academy of Engineering.