Google sospende l’ingegnere che afferma che la sua IA ha un’anima

Google sospende l’ingegnere che afferma che la sua IA ha un’anima

Google ha sospeso un suo ingegnere – Blake Lemoine – dopo che quest’ultimo ha affermato che il Language Model for Dialogue Applications (LaMDA) dell’azienda avesse una coscienza e un’anima. LaMDA è un potente algoritmo di Google per la comprensione del linguaggio naturale, presentato durante l’evento Google I/O 2021.

Di fatto si tratta di un sistema in grado di rendere più naturali le conversazioni tra l’intelligenza artificiale (AI) e gli utenti. Google afferma che centinaia di suoi ricercatori e ingegneri hanno conversato con LaMDA, arrivando a conclusioni diverse da quelle di Lemoine.

Google ha dichiarato che tale sistema imita gli scambi di conversazione e può trattare diversi argomenti, ma certamente non ha coscienza.”Il nostro team – che comprende etici e tecnologi – ha esaminato le preoccupazioni di Blake in base ai nostri principi di A.I. e lo ha informato che le prove non supportano le sue affermazioni“, ha dichiarato Brian Gabriel, portavoce di Google, in un comunicato. “Alcuni nella più ampia comunità dell’A.I. stanno considerando la possibilità a lungo termine di un’A.I. senziente, ma non ha senso farlo antropomorfizzando gli attuali modelli di conversazione, che non sono senzienti”.

 

 

 

fonte: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/12/technology/google-chatbot-ai-blake-lemoine.html

 

 

Riparare i PC con la realtà aumentata

Riparare i PC con la realtà aumentata

Dell Technologies ha presentato una nuova applicazione di realtà aumentata (Dell AR Assistant) che guida gli utenti attraverso le procedure di manutenzione e riparazione di oltre 100 PC e server Dell in sette lingue diverse e con istruzioni passo-passo. Tutto ciò che serve è uno smartphone Android o iOS. L’app non richiede un login e non archivia o trasmette informazioni sul cliente. Lo sviluppo dell’applicazione è avvenuto durante i primi mesi della pandemia, quando i tecnici non potevano recarsi a casa delle persone.

Dell mette a disposizione online i manuali dei prodotti e le relative risorse, e lo fa da oltre un decennio. Sono inclusi i download di software, driver, BIOS, firmware, patch del sistema operativo e di sicurezza. Il Dell AR Assistant è un’estensione naturale dei manuali, in un formato facile da seguire e accessibile al cliente da qualsiasi luogo. Gli utenti dell’AR Assistant possono vedere i loro dispositivi e le modalità di riparazione grazie alla realtà aumentata e alle sovrapposizioni informative sulla macchina da riparare, sfruttando la fotocamera dello smartphone.

Tara Gale, Client Solutions Country Lead, Dell Technologies Ireland, ha dichiarato: “La riparabilità continua a essere una priorità per noi di Dell Technologies. Sappiamo che gli utenti vogliono avere un maggiore controllo sui loro dispositivi, anche per quanto riguarda le riparazioni. Da sempre sostenitrice della riparabilità, Dell ha cambiato le carte in tavola con un’applicazione di realtà aumentata per le riparazioni IT, il Dell AR Assistant, unica nel suo genere. Il nostro obiettivo è quello di consentire ai consumatori di riparare facilmente i dispositivi da soli, laddove ne siano in grado. In definitiva stiamo cercando di ridurre i tempi di riparazione per i problemi che possono essere risolti dagli stessi utenti, con un piccolo aiuto da parte di Dell“.

Microscopio digitale & Smartglasses per l’industria elettronica

Microscopio digitale & Smartglasses per l’industria elettronica

Un settore altamente innovativo come quello dell’ industria elettronica, può beneficiare enormemente della sinergia tra il microscopio digitale e gli smartglasses. Nel nostro progetto realizzato per la IMW abbiamo connesso i due device in modo tale che il tecnico possa vedere direttamente dove sta operando senza necessariamente alzare ogni volta lo sguardo verso il monitor. Questo ha comportato un forte riduzione del carico cognitivo da parte dell’operatore con la conseguente riduzione degli errori.

Mirko Compagno

Covid and Big Tech are driving Augmented Reality into healthcare

Covid and Big Tech are driving Augmented Reality into healthcare

Augmented Reality tech is helping hospitals to deliver better patient care while at the same time cutting down on Covid infection danger, as Giacomo Lee reports.

Alder Hey Children’s Hospital in Liverpool has added to a long list of “firsts” in its century-long history by making innovative use of Augmented Reality (AR) technology to help its staff deliver better care.

“I was in the operating theatre performing a complex repair on a little heart, no bigger than the size of a strawberry,” says Rafael Guerrero, heart unit director and chief of congenital cardiac surgery at Alder Hey, one of the largest children’s hospitals in the UK.

Guerrero, who is also clinical director of innovation at Alder Hey, is recounting how he strapped on a pair of Microsoft’s HoloLens 2 smartglasses during surgery last year, bringing a new kind of cutting edge into the operating theatre – that of augmented reality. Transmitting the view of the patient’s heart live through HoloLens to colleagues nowhere nearby, as well as reviewing the echocardiogram at the same time, the procedure was another example of groundbreaking healthcare in Alder Hey’s wards.

 

In those wards there’s an obvious risk that Covid stalks the corridors, but older stalwarts such as MRSA remain equally infectious. As such, Alder Hey, the first hospital to test penicillin and to establish a neo-natal unit in the UK, wanted to use immersive, augmented and mixed reality (MR) technology to reduce the amount of physical contact between hospital staff and the public.

Working with Insight’s FastStart service to find technological solutions, the hospital primarily needed a way to communicate and share images and real life scenarios with other practitioners, regardless of location. This had to be done through video and audio in real time 24/7, not only for remote patient care, but also virtual ward rounds and staff training.

 

Wearing a HoloLens 2 device running Microsoft’s remote assist software Dynamics 365, Guerrero could perform his rounds alone. Other specialists joined in using the Teams app, seeing exactly what the clinician saw, along with three-dimensional (3D) echocardiography.

Alongside this augmented reality including real-life video, there was the ability for 2-way audio/video communication and sharing other visual content. Other important tasks  – such as updating patient records  – could also be redistributed among the team to save time as Guerrero worked.

“Using HoloLens, we have already demonstrated the potential of mixed-reality healthcare applications to minimise the number of staff required to be in contact with patients; share expertise in the shortest possible time and from any location; and, ultimately, increase the quality of care,” Guerrero tells Verdict.

Guerrero believes these applications would allow Alder Hey to support clinicians and patients in other hospitals and in the community, without the need for travel in either direction, thus helping efficiency and expertise-sharing in the NHS.

“While Covid-19 has acted as a catalyst, mixed reality devices that can support collaboration, mobility and remote learning need to be part of the technology that we use to drive a healthcare revolution,” says the specialist.

The Augmented Reality revolution in health

GlobalData forecasts that the global AR market will be worth $76bn by 2030, up from $4bn in 2018. As GlobalData analysts write in a recent report on AR in the health industry, “the healthcare sector is undergoing a digital transformation, fuelled by changing healthcare payor and provider need … AR is gradually making its way into the healthcare sector.”

This revolution is coming about for various reasons in more than one area of healthcare. Another application of AR is aiding visualisation during minimally invasive surgery (MIS).

Startups such as Medivis and Proprio are selling MR solutions in the surgical space, with the latter recently talking to Verdict about its AR and artificial intelligence-combined solution. Surgeons can also benefit from the augmented reality “x-ray vision” granted by US brand Augmedix, with an AR navigation tech that allows them to see a patient’s anatomy through skin and tissue whilst operating.

AR is a useful surgeon’s aid for the the visualisation of complex biological processes. EchoPixel’s True 3D software can help healthcare professionals visualise and interact with 3D images that depict human tissue and organs in open space as if they were real objects. Novarad’s OpenSight solution renders 2D, 3D and 4D images of patients interactively, while accurately overlaying them directly onto the patient’s body. Both solutions allow for more accurate surgical planning.

Distant doctors, digital health

The Alder Hey case study, though, shows how AR can be useful when integrated into telemedicine to help healthcare specialists work remotely. The same can apply to medical students: Imperial College London pre-empted Alder Hey somewhat in early 2020 by creating the world’s first virtual ward round for medical students, who watched as a HoloLens-equipped doctor examined a patient.

In times of social distancing, medical students can improve their knowledge and skills by accessing human body models created by AR. Solutions like those from EchoPixel allow medical students to familiarize themselves with the human anatomy and practice surgeries on virtual patients.

Real-life flesh and blood patients can also benefit from an augmented reality when distanced from doctors. A recent GlobalData report on digital health solutions in neurology suggests that virtual reality (VR) and AR are “well placed as a therapy product for neuropsychological conditions because virtual simulations of the outside world are highly realistic and immersive, as well as being non-invasive and non-pharmacological.”

Simulations offer less time-consuming options in comparison to some pharmacological interventions due to their immersive attributes, making for highly engaging forms of therapy.

Indeed, augmented reality technology appears in therapies targeting everything from chronic pain management, mental health and addiction, to behavioural conditions and neurorehabilitation. AR is also used effectively in exposure therapy, overlaying the hands of insect-phobic patients in live video with digital cockroaches and spiders. Cognoa’s Superpower Glass wearable meanwhile, a device based on Google Glass, helps autistic children better understand facial expressions through the use of emojis overlaid on the lens.

Home invasion

The rise of AR in health comes as VR/AR headsets and smart glasses become cheaper, and more AR apps appear on smartphones. Some brands like XRHealth are even sending out headsets to customers to treat ADHD using extended reality (XR). With FDA approval and products covered by insurance for over 50 million people in the US, XRHealth was able to trial a service which also offers a personalised care plan, in-app messaging and video calls with a dedicated clinician. While headsets may be an alien concept in the common household, especially so with regards to healthcare, teleconferencing with a medical professional is perhaps more agreeable to consumers after the pandemic’s video boom.

Medical professionals themselves are also succumbing to AR’s charms. A 2021 poll shared in GlobalData’s report on digital health in neurology found that 18% of 109 respondents in the industry thought AR/VR solutions would be most suitable to treat mental and behavioural health conditions such as depression, anxiety and substance abuse compared to other technologies. Meanwhile 15% of 110 respondents believed AR/VR technologies would be most suitable for neurological conditions such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s.

Big Tech is pushing Augmented Reality in health

Besides the approval of the medical community, AR will also need Big Tech’s money to fully push it through the hospital doors. The adoption of HoloLens devices by Alder Hey and other hospitals shows that Microsoft already has one foot in the door. The tech company’s recent $19.7bn purchase of Nuance Communications will also help.

UK-based Nuance, a speech-recognition company best known for having provided Siri’s speech recognition engine, offers enterprise AI tools that transcribe doctors’ notes and visits during a working day. It isn’t much of a stretch to see that tech mixed with smart glasses: Healthcare professionals regularly require access to information systems, whilst often needing their hands free.

Here AR can reduce the burnout physicians face as it provides easy and quick access to real-time information, thus easing administrative burden. Data from the US suggests that more than 50% of the physician workforce is burned out, with excessive admin a major contributory factor; such burnout can affect safety and the quality of care in hospitals, and also increase healthcare costs.

With smart glasses augmenting reality, staff can work and take notes without the added weight of a physical notepad. This also allows for more accuracy as notes are taken in real-time, rather than the staff trying to recall information after patient interactions.

For Guerrero, this easier way of dealing with information was one reason why the HoloLens experiment was a successful one in Alder Hey.

“Ultimately, the success of any procedure is down to the skills of the surgeon and the team,” he tells Verdict. “Although new technology is used as a tool or aid for the surgeon to use, there are other ways of accessing the same information. It just takes longer and is not as accessible.”

In general, AR in medical devices is led by smaller vendors specialising in software and apps, according to GlobalData analyst Aliyah Farouk. But big tech players are investing in healthcare and working with the industry’s giants. Roche for example partnered with Samsung’s AR/VR subsidiary Harman in 2020.

“It’s difficult to say the extent of investment or impact in augmented healthcare as this is still a largely untapped market,” says Farouk. “You can look at areas where AR is making a big difference in tech, e.g. smart glasses and whether these devices are being used for healthcare purposes. For example, Google relaunched Google Glass Enterprise in 2017 targeting healthcare companies.

“Harman’s collaboration with Roche and Microsoft’s recent purchase of Nuance is reflective of this trend where healthcare companies are increasing their connectivity/digitalization and tech companies are capitalizing on this.”

By Verdict’s Giacomo Lee. Find the GlobalData Augmented Reality in Healthcare – Thematic Research report here.

fonte: https://www.pharmaceutical-technology.com/features/covid-and-big-tech-are-driving-augmented-reality-into-healthcare/

Nextech AR Solutions Announces Limited Early Access to HoloX – Telepresence Creator Platform

Nextech AR Solutions Announces Limited Early Access to HoloX – Telepresence Creator Platform

HoloX advances self-serve augmented reality human holograms
VANCOUVER, British Columbia–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Nextech AR Solutions Corp. (“Nextech” or the “Company”) (OTCQB: NEXCF) (NEO: NTAR) (CSE: NTAR) (FSE: N29), a diversified leading provider of augmented reality (“AR”) experience technologies and services, is pleased to announce an exclusive, early access program for users to create, view and share their human holograms. Program participation will support the development lifecycle of HoloX, leading to its full release expected in the third quarter of 2021. In addition to the smart packaging use case noted below, AR human holograms have uses within dating applications, speaker keynotes, remote support, virtual brand ambassadors for new product launches and episodic content for marketing.

For HoloX early access program – limited to 100 seats – and DEMO VIDEO, CLICK HERE.

“Our goal to allow anyone to create and share their own augmented reality human hologram – using just a smart phone – is the key step towards mass adoption,” commented Evan Gappelberg, Founder and CEO of Nextech AR Solutions. “With the ongoing advancements made to our applications, we continue to tie together our AR offerings into one platform that offers an array of AR solutions. The ability to create the feeling of presence – or being in the same room in real time – with a live-streaming human hologram is one of the core technologies that will lead the transformation towards spatial computing.”

“At Nextech AR, we are bridging physical and digital worlds,” commented Paul Duffy, President and Chairman of Nextech, creator of the HumaGram™ and holder of multiple patents for Augmented Reality and Holographic Telepresence. “AR is the new mass medium used for the benefit of humanity and I’m pleased to see it become a reality. We firmly believe that utilizing live streaming human holograms will result in an explosion of new use cases and is destined to play a significant role in global entertainment, commerce and learning.”

About HoloX
Powered by artificial intelligence and augmented reality, HoloX builds on the Company’s AiRShow app (Google PlayApple App Store) used in the music and entertainment industries where artists and public speakers utilize holograms to meet individual audience members where they are – often in their own homes. In addition, this technology has been applied successfully to smart packaging where AR human holograms are used to engage, enable and retain customers while increasing product sales and brand awareness. Nextech sees additional use cases with holographic dating applications, speaker keynotes, remote support, virtual brand ambassadors for new product launches and episodic content for marketing.

fonte: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20210616005465/en/Nextech-AR-Solutions-Announces-Limited-Early-Access-to-HoloX-%E2%80%93-Telepresence-Creator-Platform