Human judgement is 100 % required to create an AI model. The human provides the training data, and decides which meaning(s) to assign to the numerical value(s) that the model outputs The human also decides how and where to implement the model. Human judgement isn’t going anywhere anytime soon.
ME/CFS is more common in women, so it isn’t completely unreasonable to expect that some of the unique characteristics of women’s biology influences the symptoms.
Idk how to (dis)prove causality, though. Any ideas?
Should we somehow archive the patient info page? Idk how to do that, and I don’t have the capacity.
It might be needed in the future, they are not above deleting information when it gets called out.
One way to reduce stigma is to educated the general population. I wonder what they would have found if they asked Norwegians about basic facts about DT1&2.
PAID-20 only has one question about interactions with others, so it appears that most of the «blame» is put on the patient:
Uncomfortable...
@Jonathan Edwards
«According to information obtained retrospectively and from follow-up treatment providers, the course of the disease showed a further normalization of her psychological and physical development after 6 months, with a BMI-P6 and a complete regression of previous CFS/ME-like...
This part is a bit off, though:
Many questions remain unanswered in this case. One of them concerns the validity of the diagnosis CFS/ME: Given its currently low validity, does it lead to its use as mimicry in the context of artificial disorders?
I don’t understand why they go after ME/CFS. The...
@Jonathan Edwards
Edit to add: the following paragraph is my interpretation of the authors’ opinion.
It seems like she might have been sick from supplements, and Mara «acted» sick because her mother needed her to for her own mental health.
@Adrian declining symptoms is a good thing.
From the...
No. We don’t do that with anything today, there’s no reason to believe that it will happen with AI. The only exception is EU’s AI Act.
Some do learn over time.
There’s a case from Norway where they use AI to create 3D models of organs before surgery. That used to be done manually by doctors...
Seeing Huntington on that list doesn’t surprise me. It’s a hereditary neurodegenerative disease that’s often described as a combination of ALS, Parkinson and Alzheimers. Some common causes of death are suicide, complications due to falls and lung damage due to food going down the wrong tube.
From the article:
This research is early and may evolve. But the findings more broadly indicate that right now, simply giving physicians A.I. tools and expecting automatic improvements doesn’t work. Physicians aren’t completely comfortable with A.I. and still doubt its utility, even if it could...
Graded activity adaptation: Increasing capacity
As mentioned, graded activity adaptation is about increasing your capacity within the arena of life you want. So it's good to know something about what happens in our bodies when we increase our capacity. Our bodies are supposed to react with...
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