I am looking forward to this week’s @amia.org Amplify Conference in Denver, CO, where I will be conducting my usual in-person session for those completing the AMIA 10x10 (“ten by ten”) introductory course in biomedical informatics and AI.
amia.org/education-ev...
I am off to Chicago for a two-day workshop on ophthalmology and AI, Illinois Eye-TEACH (Technology, Education, Artificial Intelligence, and Clinical Informatics in Healthcare. It is taking place at my medical school alma mater, UIC.
chicago.medicine.uic.edu/ophthalmolog...
In October I will be giving it to students at my own institution, Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU). A link to a PDF of slides and references is below.
assets.zyrosite.com/Aq2WRaVw59SJ...
I am no expert in ophthalmology but I like to think I know something about AI in biomedicine. Below is a link to my slides on a panel where I will be discussion competencies and challenges for education in AI and biomedical informatics.
assets.zyrosite.com/Aq2WRaVw59SJ...
But I enjoy getting new medical students to think about the role of data, information, and AI in their future careers. Today I am giving the lecture to students at Nova Southeastern College of Allopathic Medicine.
I am also speaking on two panels:
5/19 - Bridge2AI-Voice: Advancing Clinical AI Through Ethically Sourced Voice Biomarkers
5/21 - Teaching AI: Strategies for Educating Across the Medical Continuum, From Students to Seasoned Clinicians
Nice to get together with 10 of the 50 students completing the January-May 10x10 (“ten by ten”) course and spend an afternoon talking about all things informatics at the @amia.org Amplify meeting in Denver.
In recent years, the lecture has added a growing amount of content about artificial intelligence (AI), which unfortunately means some other important informatics-related material gets crowded out.
These sessions are option for those completing the otherwise online introductory course in biomedical informatics and AI. (And nice that we talked about more than AI; the rest of informatics is still important!)