Siemens manages to imitate human intuition to predict medical therapies

Siemens manages to imitate human intuition to predict medical therapies



With this technique you can also predict the price of electricity 20 days in advance



   Artificial intelligence, robots, internet of things. These words are already part of the Spanish imaginary and are increasingly easy to understand by the population. A breakthrough technology that gains by leaps and bounds in day-to-day weight.

Therefore, companies continue to make efforts to adapt to these changes. "The ability to learn is a precondition for autonomy," Siemens said in a statement. Its objective "is to help other companies to better understand their data and thus prepare for the production environments of the future," he adds.

   His latest advance in research has been the creation of knowledge networks based on neurons and simulated connections related to learning. "Neurological systems process and transmit information always for the same reasons regardless of the individual concerned," they explain.

Knowledge networks can also be used in making medical decisions in hospitals . Siemens has developed several solutions within the framework of the Data Intelligence for Clinical Solutions project, financed by BMWi, based on the applications that the company created with the Charité hospital in Berlin and the Erlangen University Hospital.

"The objective is to develop systems that can learn to make predictions and" decision forecasts "(for example, to predict the probability of success of different therapies) based on the patient's available data," they write.

The Siemens team led by Volker Tresp, Siemens expert in machine learning and computer teacher at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich. has taken a step further and models mathematical knowledge networks with up to ten million objects. This means that you can make up to 1014 possible predictions about the relationships between these objects , which roughly corresponds to the number of synapses in an adult human brain.

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