@marcusborba 3 years ago
#ArtificialIntelligence Won't Save Us From #Coronavirus The hype is real, but the potential is not: Approach claims around #AI and #COVID19 with skepticism https://bit.ly/3aBc8zX @AlexCEngler @WIRED #MachineLearning #HealthTech #DataScience #Medicine #DeepLearning #Healthcare https://t.co/7TW4l8dZO3
@WIRED 5 years ago
A real surgical resident breaks down medical scenes from film & TV.
@WIRED 6 years ago
A real surgical resident breaks down medical scenes from film & TV.
@WIRED 6 years ago
Inaccuracies in TV medical dramas and movies are nothing new, but over the years there have been some real doozies. We asked an actual surgical resident ...
@WIRED 6 years ago
A real surgeon breaks down medical scenes from film & TV.
@WIRED 6 years ago
A real surgeon breaks down medical scenes from Film & TV https://t.co/ur5bNJAgys
@WIRED 6 years ago
Inaccuracies in TV medical dramas and movies are nothing new, but over the years there have been some real doozies. We asked an actual surgical resident ...
@WIRED 6 years ago
Qualcomm is developing an entirely new kind of healthcare—one where tools like VR help doctors better understand, diagnose, and treat patients in real life.
@WIRED 6 years ago
While it’s true that yes, the US is in the midst of a “historic drug epidemic,” marijuana is not the drug that kills 91 Americans every single day.
@WIRED 6 years ago
While it’s true that yes, the US is in the midst of a “historic drug epidemic,” marijuana is not the drug that kills 91 Americans every single day.
@WIRED 8 years ago
This year has made clearer than ever before that the Internet of Things introduces all the vulnerabilities of the digital world into our real world.
@WIRED 8 years ago
Trained medical professionals explain exactly how much pain— and what surgeries— the robbers would actually require if those accidents occurred in ...
@WIRED 9 years ago
The following piece contains spoilers for The Knick season finale, "Crutchfield." Stop here if you haven't seen it. You've been warned.
@WIRED 9 years ago
Let's face it, people aren't about to stop Googling for "vague tingling in my left arm" anytime soon. Google's experiment highlights just how hard it is to do real medicine on the Internet.