Artificial intelligence in biology and medicine, and radioprotection research: perspectives from Jerusalem

Y. Socol, Ariella Richardson, Imene Garali-Zineddine, Stephane Grison, Guillaume Vares, Dmitry Klokov
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Abstract

While AI is widely used in biomedical research and medical practice, its use is constrained to few specific practical areas, e.g., radiomics. Participants of the workshop on “Artificial Intelligence in Biology and Medicine” (Jerusalem, Feb 14–15, 2023), both researchers and practitioners, aimed to build a holistic picture by exploring AI advancements, challenges and perspectives, as well as to suggest new fields for AI applications. Presentations showcased the potential of large language models (LLMs) in generating molecular structures, predicting protein-ligand interactions, and promoting democratization of AI development. Ethical concerns in medical decision making were also addressed. In biological applications, AI integration of multi-omics and clinical data elucidated the health relevant effects of low doses of ionizing radiation. Bayesian latent modeling identified statistical associations between unobserved variables. Medical applications highlighted liquid biopsy methods for non-invasive diagnostics, routine laboratory tests to identify overlooked illnesses, and AI's role in oral and maxillofacial imaging. Explainable AI and diverse image processing tools improved diagnostics, while text classification detected anorexic behavior in blog posts. The workshop fostered knowledge sharing, discussions, and emphasized the need for further AI development in radioprotection research in support of emerging public health issues. The organizers plan to continue the initiative as an annual event, promoting collaboration and addressing issues and perspectives in AI applications with a focus on low-dose radioprotection research. Researchers involved in radioprotection research and experts in relevant public policy domains are invited to explore the utility of AI in low-dose radiation research at the next workshop.
生物学和医学中的人工智能以及辐射防护研究:耶路撒冷的观点
虽然人工智能在生物医学研究和医疗实践中得到了广泛应用,但其应用仅限于一些特定的实际领域,如放射组学。人工智能在生物学和医学中的应用 "研讨会(耶路撒冷,2023 年 2 月 14-15 日)的与会者,包括研究人员和从业人员,旨在通过探讨人工智能的进步、挑战和前景来构建一个全面的图景,并提出人工智能应用的新领域。演讲展示了大型语言模型(LLM)在生成分子结构、预测蛋白质配体相互作用以及促进人工智能发展民主化方面的潜力。会议还讨论了医疗决策中的伦理问题。在生物应用方面,人工智能整合了多组学和临床数据,阐明了低剂量电离辐射对健康的影响。贝叶斯潜模型确定了未观察变量之间的统计关联。医疗应用突出了用于无创诊断的液体活检方法、用于识别被忽视疾病的常规实验室检测,以及人工智能在口腔颌面成像中的作用。可解释的人工智能和多样化的图像处理工具改进了诊断,而文本分类则检测出了博文中的厌食行为。研讨会促进了知识共享和讨论,并强调了在辐射防护研究中进一步发展人工智能以支持新出现的公共卫生问题的必要性。组织者计划将这一倡议作为年度活动延续下去,促进合作,解决人工智能应用中的问题和观点,重点关注低剂量辐射防护研究。欢迎参与辐射防护研究的研究人员和相关公共政策领域的专家在下一次研讨会上探讨人工智能在低剂量辐射研究中的应用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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