Supporting next generation AI research
Five PHHP students are inaugural recipients of the college's Ph.D. Fellowship in Artificial Intelligence program.
Five PHHP students are inaugural recipients of the college's Ph.D. Fellowship in Artificial Intelligence program.
The study will use a combination of brain imaging and artificial intelligence tools to establish the effectiveness of a cognitive training program.
Members of Dr. Zhoumeng Lin's lab received several awards and played key leadership roles at the Society of Toxicology's annual meeting.
Students worked around the clock last weekend to find and share meaning in a large, rich and complex dataset.
Attendees explored AI governance issues with a goal of developing interdisciplinary theories to help guide for-profit and non-profit organizations.
Prosperi will work with the associate deans for research and education and the department chairs to expand PHHP’s AI efforts in research, teaching and commercialization.
Her fellowship project will use large-scale electronic health records databases for prognostic, diagnostic and treatment outcome prediction studies.
To combat antibiotic misuse, researchers developed a decision-making tool that tells doctors the probability the culprit is solely a virus.
With support of a new $3.7 million grant, they will use AI and machine learning to build an algorithm to spot new variants of concern.
The program will help students apply knowledge in artificial intelligence to future careers in public health and health sciences.