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Chinese scholars use AI to screen newborns for genetic disorders via facial scan

South China Morning Post
發布於 2019年11月12日03:11 • Sarah Dai sarah.dai@scmp.com
  • The new assistive diagnosis tool was designed to detect more than 100 disorders with distinctive facial features
Researchers from the Shanghai Children’s Medical Centre and the Shanghai Paediatric Centre said their new AI-based assistive diagnosis tool would be used for initial screening, helping avoid missed or wrong diagnosis of newborns. Photo: Xinhua

Chinese scholars have developed artificial intelligence-powered software that is geared to help screen newborns for genetic disorders through a facial scan.

Researchers from the Shanghai Children's Medical Centre and the Shanghai Paediatric Centre said their new assistive diagnosis tool, which they described as the first of its kind, was designed to detect more than 100 disorders with distinctive facial features, including Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS) and Down syndrome, according to a report by state-owned China News Service on Friday.

廣告(請繼續閱讀本文)

They said their AI-enabled tool would be used for initial screening, helping avoid missed or wrong diagnosis of newborns.

Prominent facial features of children with CdLS, for example, include thin eyebrows that often meet at the midline, long eyelashes, short upturned nose, thin downturned lips, low-set ears and high-arched palate or cleft palate, according to the CdLS Foundation. Children with Down syndrome may have tiny white spots in the coloured part of their eyes, flatter faces, a tongue that hangs out of the mouth and eyes shaped like almonds, or shaped in a way that is not typical for their ethnic group.

Chinese, US scholars jointly develop AI model to improve diagnosis of sick children

廣告(請繼續閱讀本文)

Powered by so-called deep learning algorithms, the new tool will be used to review past medical records for facial profile patterns and make use of that data to help diagnose new cases.

The software has already been put on a trial run in Shanghai, where paediatricians upload and submit photographs or video taken from patients for screening of suspected disorders, according to the report.

Diagnosis and early detection are among the most highly prized health care applications of AI in China. While it is the world's second largest economy, China is known for shortages in medical resources and long waiting queues at major hospitals. AI has already been put to use across the country to predict flu outbreaks, check for chronic diseases and diagnose cases of cancer.

廣告(請繼續閱讀本文)

This latest development in using AI and facial recognition for health care comes as the Trump administration added eight companies, including China's AI national champions SenseTime Group and Megvii Technology, to Washington's trade blacklist for their purported roles in the suppression of Uygur minorities in Xinjiang.

How AI and human rights have been dragged into the US-China tech war, threatening wider split

A number of other large Chinese companies are making headway in using AI for health care. In July of this year, Chinese conglomerate Ping An Insurance launched AskBob, an AI-based medical decision support tool that can provide precise diagnosis and treatment recommendations for more than 1,500 diseases. This tool was initially introduced in Singapore through collaborations with SingHealth and the National University Health System.

The US Food and Drug Administration expects AI technologies to transform health care by "deriving new and important insights" from the vast amount of data generated everyday. It predicted "high value applications" would be made in various areas, including early disease detection, identification of new observations or patterns of human physiology, and in the development of personalised therapeutics.

For more insights into China tech, sign up for our tech newsletters, subscribe to our Inside China Tech podcast, and download the comprehensive 2019 China Internet Report. Also roam China Tech City, an award-winning interactive digital map at our sister site Abacus.

Copyright (c) 2019. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

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