The COVID pandemic is forcing almost every industry and company to rethink how they do business. Higher education is no exception.
Medical practitioners are incorporating artificial intelligence (AI) via in vitro fertilisation (IVF) to improve the success rate of fertilization by predicting which embryo will result in a viable pregnancy.
Phil and Andrea Marella of Greenwich Connecticut lost their daughter Dana Jesse Marella to Niemann-Pick type C, a neurodegenerative disease in 2013.
Global crisis though it is, COVID-19 has brought about a reckoning in healthcare.
The combination of initial forays back to the world, work, and notably schools; plus far more testing than we did at the start of the pandemic, produces one inevitable result: surges in case counts everywhere the population wasn’t uniformly exposed already. Is this bad, and if so- how bad? Is it in some way good? Or, is it something in between?
Interested in astronomy? Amateur astronomy is an interesting hobby that can also help you contribute to science.
Artificial intelligence has the promise to make healthcare professionals smarter, better, faster, and cheaper and, as a result, make patients healthier at less cost and healthcare workers happier, less burned out and more productive. AI could even help transform sickcare into healthcare.