IBM teams with Apple on artificial intelligence health program
IBM teams with Apple on artificial intelligence health
program
AFP 8 hours ago
San Francisco (AFP) - IBM on Monday announced alliances
with Apple and others to put artificial intelligence to work drawing
potentially life-saving insights from the booming amount of health data
generated on personal devices.
IBM is collaborating with Apple, Medtronic, and Johnson
& Johnson to use its Watson artificial intelligence system to give users
insights and advice from personal health information gathered from fitness
trackers, smartphones, implants or other devices.
The initiative is trying to take advantage of medical
records increasingly being digitized, allowing quick access for patients and
healthcare providers if the information can be stored and shared effectively.
IBM wants to create a platform for that sharing.
"All this data can be overwhelming for providers and
patients alike, but it also presents an unprecedented opportunity to transform
the ways in which we manage our health," IBM senior vice president John
Kelly said in a news release.
"We need better ways to tap into and analyze all of
this information in real-time to benefit patients and to improve wellness
globally."
IBM expects more companies to join the health platform,
which it envisions growing to a global scale.
In addition, the New York based company said it is
acquiring a pair of healthcare technology companies and establishing an IBM
health unit.
Watson is a cognitive computing system that bested human
competition in a Jeopardy trivia television game show.
Under the partnership it will be able to handle data
collected using health applications from Apple mobile devices, according to
IBM.
"Now IBM's secure cloud and analytics capabilities
provide additional tools to help accelerate discoveries across a wide variety
of health issues," Apple senior vice president of operations Jeff Williams
said in a release.
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