Tech Wonder: Robot Doctors Getting Ready for Work!

in #robot7 years ago

There comes a time in a robot's life that it has to go out and make something of itself. Today was a good day for this noble robot as it just became the world's first robot doctor to pass its medical exams. Not only did it pass, it passed spectacularly!

The robot doctor I'm referring to is named Xiao Yi. It just took the same exams its human counterparts are required to pass and proved to the world that it had "mastered" the skills required of a doctor in China.

This robot didn't study the way a normal human would by hitting the books but rather needed a bit of help from his designers. Researchers prepared him for these exams by inputting knowledge from dozens of medical books over the past year.

But apparently these medical exams aren't just designed to test knowlege but also require proof of a "reasoning process" for treating a given symptom.

Xiao Yi made his programmers proud when it scored 465 points out of 600 total marks and offically passed China's National Medical Licensing Examination.

The makers of the robot from Tsinghua University in Beijing said the robot performed a lot better than expected!

"Its score is 96 points above the acceptance line," said Wu Ji, deputy head of the electronic engineering department.

"This shows that it has indeed mastered the medical knowledge and clinical knowledge, and it has owned the basic ability to employ the knowledge to solve some problems," he added.

"We made an electronic edition of the test paper for it, with the content same as the paper edition," said a worker at the National Medical Examination Center.

"We should say that robots are superior to people in memory, or storage capacity and computing ability," said Wu.

Beyond that workers at the examination center commented that he also showed a human approach when it came to treating sick people.

"Quite a few questions are case analyses, that is, you are informed the basic conditions of some patients and some of their symptoms, then you have to tell what disease it is, what treatment should be adopted or what medicine they should take.

"Many are questions like this. Such complicated questions cannot be answered only by searching.

"Therefore, it is essentially a reasoning process based on knowledge and probability model," said Wu.

Of course Xiao Yi will have to go through much more rigorous training before advancing to become a fully qualified doctor.

For now, Xiao Yi will be allowed to assist a human medic rather than replace one.

"What it can do most at present is to offer some possible suggestions to doctors, so as to help doctors to find where the problems lie more rapidly, or to avoid some risks," said Wu.

Take a quick look at Xiao Yi and see if you think this clever robot has the stuff it takes to make a good doc!

How do you feel about robotic doctors? Would you prefer a human one or would you be more satisfied if you had a statistically better experience or chance of getting better when being treated by a robo doc?

Please leave thoughts and comments below!

Thanks for reading.

Source:

Robot doctors come a step closer as a machine passes medical exams with flying colours - The Mirror

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It's the way the world is going. Why wouldn't they make robodocs...?

maybe they will know a lot more than modern doctors, but surgeons are still the best people left

I think this isnt going to fully replace doctors. But it is a stepping stone towards that goal. Already its quite common to see robotics involved in surgeries.

Reminds of the 2010 film I'm Here about human-like robots and real humans living life and working among each other in Los Angeles.

Personally I would prefer a real doctor over this thing. If it hurts me it couldn't possibly relate to the pain I feel as a result. Keep blogging @techblogger!

This robodoctor needs a lot of work! Glad to see this is an area of focus in modern robotic design and engineering though!

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Interesting post!

Isn't this a good example of Moravec's Paradox?

"Moravec's paradox is the discovery by artificial intelligence and robotics researchers that, contrary to traditional assumptions, high-level reasoning requires very little computation, but low-level sensorimotor skills require enormous computational resources."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moravec%27s_paradox

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