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DeepMind’s AI Can Predict the Progression of AMD Eye Condition – Analytics Insight

The proliferation of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in the Healthcare sector is one advancement that is worth a watch. Several major companies including big techs are moving forward in the same direction to revolutionize how care is being given to those in need. Recently, a collaboration between Googles DeepMind and Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust has come up with a development of an AI model that has the potential to predict whether a patient will develop wet AMD within six months. In the future, this system could potentially help doctors plan studies of earlier intervention, as well as contribute more broadly to the clinical understanding of the disease and disease progression.

Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is the biggest cause of sight loss in the UK and the USA and is the third-largest cause of blindness across the globe.

Around 75 percent of patients with AMD have an early form called dry AMD that usually has a relatively mild impact on vision. A minority of patients, however, develop the more sight-threatening form of AMD called exudative, or wet AMD. This condition affects around 15 percent of patients and occurs when abnormal blood vessels develop underneath the retina. These vessels can leak fluid, which can cause permanent loss of central vision if not treated early enough.

The researchers trained and tested its AI model using a retrospective, anonymized dataset of 2,795 patients. These patients had been diagnosed with wet AMD in one of their eyes and were attending one of seven clinical sites for regular OCT imaging and treatment. For each patient, the researchers worked with retinal experts to review all prior scans for each eye and determine the scan when wet AMD was first evident. In collaboration with its colleagues at DeepMind, the company developed an AI system composed of two deep convolutional neural networks, one taking the raw 3D scan as input and the other, built on its previous work, taking a segmentation map outlining the types of tissue present in the retina. DeepMinds prediction system used the raw scan and tissue segmentation to estimate a patients risk of progressing to wet AMD within the next six months.

To test the system, the company presented the model with a single, de-identified scan and asked it to predict whether any signs indicated the patient would develop wet AMD in the following six months. DeepMind also asked six clinical expertsthree retinal specialists and three optometrists, each with at least ten years experienceto do the same. Predicting the possibility of a patient developing wet AMD is not a task that is usually performed in clinical practice so this is the first time, that experts have been assessed on this ability.

While clinical experts performed better than chance alone, there was substantial variability between their assessments. DeepMinds system performed as well as, and in certain cases better than, these clinicians in predicting wet AMD progression. This highlights its potential use for informing studies in the future to assess or help develop treatments to prevent wet AMD progression.

Future work could address several limitations of this research. The sample was representative of practice at multiple sites of the worlds largest eye hospital, but more work is needed to understand the model performance in different demographics and clinical settings. Such work should also understand the impact of unstudied factorssuch as additional imaging teststhat might be important for prediction but were beyond the scope of this work.

These findings demonstrate the potential for AI to help improve understanding of disease progression and predict the future risk of patients developing sight-threatening conditions. This, in turn, could help doctors study preventive treatments.

This is the latest stage in DeepMinds partnership with Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, a long-standing relationship that transitioned from DeepMind to Google Health in September 2019. The companys previous collaborations include using AI to quickly detect eye conditions, and showing how Google Cloud AutoML might eventually help clinicians without prior technical experience to accurately detect common diseases from medical images.

This is early research, rather than a product that could be implemented in routine clinical practice. Any future product would need to go through rigorous prospective clinical trials and regulatory approvals before it could be used as a tool for doctors. This work joins a growing body of research in the area of developing predictive models that could inform clinical research and trials. In line with this, Moorfields will be making the dataset available through the Ryan Initiative for Macular Research. The researchers hope that models like theirs will be able to support this area of work to improve patient outcomes.

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Smriti is a Content Analyst at Analytics Insight. She writes Tech/Business articles for Analytics Insight. Her creative work can be confirmed @analyticsinsight.net. She adores crushing over books, crafts, creative works and people, movies and music from eternity!!

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Best Deep Sleep Music To Calm Your Mind at Night – SheKnows

Weve all been there: Mind racing, phone sitting just a bit too close to your bedside, a world of lists of things to do, think and worry about that it makes falling asleep (or even winding down enough to think about falling asleep) impossible.

Theres plenty of folks trying to hack their ways into a better nights sleep: From supplements to technology to intensely designed mattresses. But what if you could try to get into the sweet ZZZ zone with just a few videos? Thats the road plenty of people (myself included) take when we find it hard to put our devices down and put ourselves to bed. When you find the right sleep music for you it can be a video with nature sounds, meditative instrumentals or white noise paired with a soothing (preferably dark) screen youll find that its just a bit easier to block out anything that isnt soothing, calming or sleep-friendly.

To help you insomniacs out, we rounded up some of our favorite chill dark screen sleep videos. May you never stay awake long enough to reach the end of them!

Ready to invest in a better nights sleep? Heres some of our favorite sleep tech to try:

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Crash mastered and all-time high in mind – Tradimo

Which trades brought success?

A very large proportion of the profits came from products that make volatility tradable in the markets. It is well known that volatility in the markets reached very extreme levels in March. This is also one of the causes of our drawdown. We already anticipated falling volatility in early March. As volatility continued to rise, our losses grew. We held on to our positions as luckily they werent too large to wipe out our account.

In the following picture you can see the development of the VXX:

To explain briefly: The VXX is an ETF that refers to the VIX, more precisely to the first two contracts in the VIX. The VXX falls when the VIX falls or runs in contango.

Since March 20, we have earned about $16,000 on our VXX trades and the trade is still ongoing.

But we also have other trades that deal with volatility. We have had 2 calendar spreads in the VIX open since May 14, which are already around $1,800 plus.

Other trades that have advanced our account since March 20 are 3 calendar spreads in the energy markets:

Assuming these 5 trades as the main factors in our recovery, we are talking about $26,000, which can be attributed to these 5 trades alone. The remaining $5,000 is spread across various trades in soy, coffee, oats, stocks, and several small option wins.

In ourPremium Service, you will immediately know when a new trade is opened, closed or managed. Check out the sponsored offer to join for free!

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‘This is my deep breath’: New Jersey pro surfer returns to the water in Ventnor for the first time since coronavirus closed the beach – Press of…

As Cassidy McClain zipped up her wetsuit and squeezed her feet into her booties, a familiar sense overcame her.

She lifted her surfboard out of her Hyundai Sonata on May 16 and looked toward the Ventnor pier, the cool sea breeze flowing through her short, sunkissed hair.

She knew this place. This beach was her home, where she found her balance and won a few surfing competitions. But McClain, who grew up in Ventnor and graduated from Atlantic City High School in 2013, hadnt visited in more than a month, since the coronavirus closed the citys beaches and barred all activities, including surfing. That Saturday brought the first decent waves since Ventnor officials said surfing could resume May 13, and the ocean was calling.

It was 7 a.m. as McClain padded down the wooden walkway. The morning sun shone through the clouds, sending orange, gray, and blue streaks across the sky, the Atlantic City Ferris wheel peeking through the hazy horizon. She sank into the sand as she walked toward the shoreline, each step pulling her closer to home. When that first incoming wave rushed across her feet, she stopped and smiled.

After 45 days without surfing the longest this 24-year-old professional surfer had gone without the sport since she started at age 9 she was back.

The first plunge felt euphoric. As she gripped her surfboard and took her first duck dive beneath a wave, the ice cold water was electrifying, sending goose bumps across her skin and recharging her almost instantly. Her face breached through the surface, and for the first time in weeks, she could breath again.

Its a rush that goes through your whole body, said McClain. This is my deep breath.

The waves werent great, but McClain, a Ventnor native, didnt care. The breaks were short and barely rideable, so she had to be fast. One second she was up on her board, twisting in the air on top of the wave. The next, she was down in the water, jumping back on and paddling out on the hunt for the next ride.

It felt different, she said after emerging from her first 45-minute surf. I was a little rusty at first, but then it just felt so good.

McClain, who was named the New Jersey Female Surfer of the Year in 2018, surfs year round she said snow storms give the best swells and travels to places like Australia, Puerto Rico and Barbados to compete and judge competitions. Shes usually only in Ventnor for a few months at a time. But the World Surf League canceled all competitions through June and she returned from Puerto Rico at the end of March, likely for a while.

When she found out the pier was closing, she was shocked.

It was definitely the right call, because there are so many unknowns with the coronavirus, she said, But at the same time, youre taking away something that people use to help with their mental health.

McClains return to the water came after residents pushed Ventnor officials to lift the surf ban, an initiative led by Lou Solomon, a 68-year-old Absecon Island native and Ventnor surfer of 55 years.

Solomon reached out to city officials two weeks ago to make his case about surfing, stressing that other towns, like Margate and Atlantic City, have allowed it. Plus, he said, its a sport of constant movement and surfers are territorial, staying away from each other to catch their own waves, which makes social distancing natural.

The city lifted the ban May 13. There are still some restrictions no waxing boards or changing into wetsuits on the beach but, as Solomon put it, youve gotta start somewhere.

Solomon said he surfed at other towns a few times during the Ventnor shutdown, but it wasnt the same. McClain chose not to, worried about the increased number of surfers being pushed to those areas.

When you live in Ventnor you wanna surf in Ventnor, Solomon said.

Like the Beach Boys say: Catch a wave, and youre sitting on top of the world, he said. Its the highest high when you get a good wave. I feel like a kid again.

Managing the stress of the coronavirus without their outlet was tough. Virtual yoga classes at the Zen Den kept McClain centered.

Im not myself when Im not in the water, she said. I crave the ocean and I cant function without it.

Another Ventnor surfer, Joel Smiler, said no other mental release compares.

Theres more to it than just grabbing a board and surfing, said Smiler, 58, a Delaware County resident with a condo in Ventnor. It becomes mind over matter and body.

There is nothing else to think about other than that wave, he said.

As McClain emerged from the ocean and peeled back her wetsuit hood, a smile stretched across her face.

You have to experience to understand, she said. I just really missed it.

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Google wants to give ‘superpowers’ to clinicians. Today it’s helping them find hotel rooms – FierceHealthcare

Google made some changes to its search and map tools to help medical staff quickly find free or discounted hotel rooms.

The feature, launched Thursday, enables healthcare professionals and essential workersto look for hotels on Google Search, Maps, or Hotel Search and filter results to showproperties that have special policies for COVID-19 responders.

For example, users can search for hotels for essential workers in New York or hotels in New York and narrow the results using a new filter for COVID-19 responder rooms.

The idea for the new feature on Google search and map tools came from the product managers in Google's U.K. office who heard thatNational Health System (NHS) workers werestrugglingto find hotel accommodations,Arvind Kannan, product managerat Google Hotelstold FierceHealthcare.

RELATED:Apple and Google launch contact tracing API for COVID-19 exposure

Many healthcare workers who treat COVID-19 patients are concerned about the risk of exposing their families to the virus and prefer to stay in nearby hotels during the pandemic. While many hotels are offering special accommodations to essentialworkers, it can be time-consuming for COVID-19 responders to find these specific hotels.

"The ideastarted out as a UK initiative but werealized that we can apply Google's scale to it. The problem is global in nature," he said.

It's part of Google's approach to usingits search engine capabilities and Internet platforms to make it easier for people to find important informationduring a global health pandemic.

"The biggest role that we can play is to help people to find useful information. We recognize this is a fluid situation and we are trying to gather information that is most relevant to people and provide it in an accessible and global fashion," Kannansaid.

Karen DeSalvo, M.D., chief health officer at Google's health division, sees the technology company playing a larger role in public health efforts.

"Billions of people come to us for information. As a former public health officer, having that kind of reach to give people information to help save their lives is anextraordinary opportunity," said DeSalvo, who was speaking at a virtual clinical informatics conference this weekhosted by theAmerican Medical Informatics Association (AMIA).

DeSalvo, a former Obama administration official, joined Googlein October. She has a long track record in public health, including Health Commissioner for the City of New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina, acting assistant secretary for health at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC).

RELATED:Apple, Google and Amazon are sprinting to battle COVID-19. Here are lessons that can be learned

Through its Search function, the company provides information about access to mental health services, how to find telehealth resources, tips to prevent the spread of COVID-19, and accurate information about the virus from healthauthorities, including theCenters for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization.

"It's a constant challenge to take down harmful information. We partner with health authorities to do that and we've stepped up it during COVID," DeSalvo said.

The company also launcheda website that uses anonymous location data collected from users of Google products and services to show the level of social distancing taking place in various locations.

The Community Mobility Reportschart movement trends over time by geography andacross locations such as retail and recreation, groceries and pharmacies, parks, transit stations, workplaces, and residential.

RELATED:Big Brother wants to track your location and health data. And that's not all bad

"One of the things we heard a lot from public health colleagues is that theyneed to know if shelter-in-place policies are working," she said, noting that the company leveraged an existing Google toolthat displays table availability at restaurants and applied that to community mobility to create the reports.

Google workedwith Apple to developdigital contact tracing technology that can be used by public health agencies to track COVID-19. The exposure notificationapplication programming interface (API) the companies developed will now be available to states, public health agencies and governments to build apps that will notifypeople via smartphone if they've come into contact with someone with the coronavirus.

Broadly, the company wants to apply its ability to make information useful and accessible to help medical professionals and address specific healthcare problems, DeSalvo said.

"How can we apply artificial intelligence, machine learning, and computer vision to improve care deliveryby giving superpowers to clinicians, doctors, and others," she said.

That could mean designing better tools to assist physicians with reading a mammogram or predicting who might develop kidney failure.

"This is a company that wants to understand health and ishungry to think about the right levers to pull where can we be useful and where we should hang back," DeSalvo said.

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This free AI chatbot helps businesses fight COVID-19 misinformation – The Next Web

Avaamo, a company that specializes in conversational AI, recently built a virtual assistant to translate natural language queries about the COVID-19 pandemic into reliable insights. In other words, its an AI-powered chatbot that can answer just about any question you have about the pandemic.

Credit: Avaamo

Avaamos Project COVID uses a deep learning system called natural language processing to turn our questions about the pandemic into website and database queries. It works a lot like Google or Bing, you input text and the AI tries to find the most relevant information possible. The big difference is that Avaamo carefully guards the gates against misinformation by only surfacing results from reputable websites such as CDC, NIH, WHO, and Johns Hopkins.

Best of all, theres no cost for businesses to use the tool. Per a press release from Avaamo:

Project COVID is also available free of cost to be embedded on the website of care management providers, health care organizations, businesses, or government agencies, which are facing a mounting number of questions, support calls and community requests for information on the COVID-19 outbreak and responses to it. The utility is free, and is designed to quickly and easily embed into any existing website in just a few minutes.

Quick take: This is really cool. The information is valid, the companys recently updated the system, and it doesnt appear that any business that wishes to implement Project COVID on their own sites will have to jump through hoops to get it installed.

Having a simple, non-medical (Avaamo is careful to point out that this is not a substitute for professional medical advice) solution to providing solid information to common COVID-19 questions is a big deal. Weve moved past static FAQs because the pandemic is an ever-changing situation. This represents a great way to keep clients, patients, and customers up-to-date without having to reinvent the wheel to do it.

For information check out Avaamos website.

Read next: Cannabis is more effective at preventing and treating COVID-19 than hydroxychloroquine

Read our daily coverage on how the tech industry is responding to the coronavirus and subscribe to our weekly newsletter Coronavirus in Context.

For tips and tricks on working remotely, check out our Growth Quarters articles here or follow us on Twitter.

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Orange Grove resident helps to heal your mind through sound – Rosebank Killarney Gazette

Jason Katz uses bowls and gongs for his Sound Journeys. Photo: Supplied

An escape from the current distress in the world is needed.

Orange Grove resident, Jason Katz provides just the right remedy for such relief through an exercise called Sound Journeys. Katz is an experienced practitioner using the unique sounds and vibrational healing effects of Himalayan Singing Bowls and gongs to facilitate deep relaxation, release and rejuvenation.

Having studied in both India and South Africa, he has been conducting Sound Journeys for over 10 years, and combines massage with Sound Journeys for those willing to explore the benefits of individual experiences.

Each sound journey is an individual unique experience. The sound of the bowls and their subsequent vibrations respond to a number of factors; the environment they are in, the ambient temperature of the space as well as the energy of the group. The body and the mind move into a state of trust and comfort, letting go and merging with the all-encompassing sounds dissolving into silence, described Katz.

Also read:Covid-19: Coping with the anxiety during lockdown Sadag

He added that the aim of the Sound Journeys was to relax the person participating, to a point of complete relaxation, where the body has a chance and innate ability to heal itself. I have long been moved by the effects of meditation, and the impact of silence and the sounds of nature. I have received incredible feedback from friends and clients and am motivated to continue sharing this gift, Katz said.

Adding to that, he said clients have described profound experiences including a shift in their moods and having depression lifted. The practitioner acknowledged that lockdown has created challenges for many, but being resilient helps people find ways to keep on sharing positive initiatives such as these. Katz said he shares his Sound Journeys on Facebook. Although there is no payment required; donations are appreciated.

Katz also often conducts sessions to raise funds for non-governmental organisations including Bet on Better, which was co-founded by a Parkhurst resident.

Details: [emailprotected] for more information.

How are you relieving your stress during lockdown? Share your stories by email to [emailprotected]

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Covid 19: Apps to get you through the lockdown anxiety

Covid-19: How to keep your anxiety in check

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AI collaboration develops an ‘early warning system’ for AMD – AOP

The artificial intelligence system could help to predict the progression of wet age-related macular degeneration in high risk patients and even guide future preventative treatments.

Researchers at Moorfields Eye Hospital and UCL Institute of Ophthalmology have developed an artificial intelligence (AI) system that can help to predict the progression of wet age-related macular degeneration (AMD) to a patients good eye.

It is common that patients develop wet AMD in one eye and start receiving treatment, before later developing it in their other eye.

A paper published on the topic in Nature Medicineexplained how, in patients diagnosed with wet AMD in one eye, the researchers introduced an AI system to predict progression to wet AMD in the second eye.

Commenting on the results of the study, Reena Chopra, research optometrist at Moorfields Eye Hospital, said: "We found that the ophthalmologists and optometrists in our study had some intuition into which eyes will progress to wet AMD. The AI was able to outperform them, indicating that there are signals within OCT scans that only the AI can detect.

This unlocks new areas of research into a disease where there are still many unanswered questions about how it develops," Ms Chopra continued.

The AI system developed by Moorfields, in partnership with researchers from DeepMind and Google Health, may allow for closer monitoring of the good eye in high risk patients, or potentially guide the use of preventative treatments in the future.

Pearse Keane, consultant ophthalmologist at Moorfields Eye Hospital commented: Patients who have lost vision from wet AMD are often particularly worried that their good eye will become affected and, as a result, that they will become blind. We hope that this AI system can be used as an early warning system for this condition and thus help preserve sight.

We are already beginning to think about how this will let us plan clinical trials of preventative therapies - for example, by treating eyes at high risk earlier, Mr Keane added.

He commented that while this wasnt a solution for AMD, we believe we have found another big piece of the puzzle.

To read more about the potential of artificial intelligence for eye health, read OTs cover feature from June 2019, Beautiful mind: what AI means for the future of optometry,in which the team spoke to Ms Chopra and Mr Keane about the pioneering collaboration with Google Health and DeepMind and the future applications for AI.

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Mind-Blowing Deep Cosmos Discovery: The Oldest Disk Galaxy From The Earliest Days Of The Universe – Dual Dove

Astronomers continue to ask themselves how you can build a galaxy. They are formulating all kinds of theories about how the gargantuan systems that are filled with gas, dust, and stars can come together.

They are using their telescopes to look at the skies and search for distant galaxies that could help reveal the mystery.

In a new study thats been published in the journal Nature this week, an international team of astronomers managed to detect light from an ancient, huge galactic disk thats lurking in a far corner of the universe.

The disk was formed in the earliest days of the universe

Its been also revealed that the light took about 12.5 billion years to reach out planet this means that the disk has been formed about 1.5 billion years after the Big Bang. In other words, these were the earliest days of the Universe.

The experts used one of the most powerful telescopes in the world, the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimetre Array.

With this monsters help, the team found the galaxy when it was studying bright light from a distant, mammoth black hole a quasar.

Some of the light has been absorbed by the galaxy on its way to our planet, and this way, it was revealed that it was hiding in the depths of the space.

According to the latest data coming from CNET, the team of experts was able tomore clearly resolve some of its features.

Previous studies hinted at the existence of these early rotating gas-rich disk galaxies, said Marcel Neeleman, an astronomer at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy and lead author on the study.

He continued and explained that Thanks to ALMA, we now have unambiguous evidence they occur as early as 1.5 billion years after the Big Bang.

Its been also reported that experts dubbed the galaxy DLA0817g aka the Wolfe Disk they called it like that in honor of astronomer Arthur M. Wolfe.

Blogging and posting articles for over 9 years, Rada Mateescu is especially enthusiastic about technology, science, and health-related issues. Youll find her articles mostly in the Science section on Dual Dove.

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Total to crunch the numbers on ‘nanoporus’ materials to hone carbon capture – Recharge

Transitioning oil giant Total is ramping up research into quantum algorithms that would improve materials for carbon dioxide (CO2) capture and storage, through a new multi-year partnership with UK start-up Cambridge Quantum Computing (CQC).

The quantum algorithms being developed will simulate all the physical and chemical mechanisms in these [materials] as a function of their size, shape and chemical composition something supercomputers dont have the processing power to do and make it possible to select the most efficient carbon capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS) materials to commercialise.

Quantum computing opens up new possibilities for solving extremely complex problems, stated Total chief technology officer Marie-Nolle Semeria.

We are therefore among the first to use quantum computing in our research to design new materials capable of capturing CO2 more efficiently. In this way, Total intends to accelerate the development of the CCUS technologies that are essential to achieve carbon neutrality in 2050.

Ilyas Khan, CEO of CQC, said: Carbon neutrality is one of the most significant topics of our time and incredibly important to the future of the planet. Total has a proven long-term commitment to CCUS solutions. We are hopeful that our work will lead to meaningful contributions and an acceleration on the path to carbon neutrality.

Nanoporous adsorbents are considered among the most promising solutions by Total, which aims to use the technology developed to capture CO2 emitted by the group's industrial operations, as well as selling it to other heavy emitter industries, such as the cement and steel sectors.

Interestingly, Total sees the new materials as potentially useful to so-called direct air capture projects as well as to trap emissions from conventional sources, such as refineries, factories and other heavy industry facilities.

Although it is generally agreed there are few technological barriers to developing CCUS, there are only 20 large-scale projects in operation including a 20m ($25.6m) scheme in the UK North Sea launched two years ago due to the absence of policy frameworks supporting investment in CCS.

The International Energy Agencys (IEA) Sustainable Development Scenario (SDS) underlines that to meet the Paris Agreements target of keeping global temperatures to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels, almost all new investment will need to be zero-carbon or be offset by the early retirement of another emitting facility or would require new technology like CCUS or hydrogen.

By IEA calculations, existing energy-using infrastructure including fossil fuel-driven power plants, industrial facilities and buildings will emit a total of 55 billion tonnes of CO2 through to 2040, which equates to almost 95% of emissions permitted in the SDS.

According to the agency, over 450 million tonnes of CO2 emissions could be captured globally for use or storage each year with an incentive of less than $40 per tonne of CO2 , a price point that could be reduced by increased investment in and deployment of CCUS, especially where there are opportunities to act at low cost.

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