Artificial Intelligence in Medicine

Scritto il 17/09/2025
da Umur Karan

Thorac Res Pract. 2025 Sep 18. doi: 10.4274/ThoracResPract.2025.2025-1-9. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Artificial intelligence (AI) holds the potential to influence and change the world through many different fields such as science, economics, technology, and art. The modern foundations of AI, with theoretical roots dating back to ancient Egyptian and Greek civilisations, were laid by Alan Turing and John McCarthy in the twentieth century. Early practices in the medical field focused on the archiving and interpretation of radiologic images and possible preliminary diagnoses. As the processing capacity of computers has advanced, so has their skill competence, and it has become possible to implement them in different specialty branches of medicine. On the other hand, ethical, and social problems, dilemmas, and conflicts have begun to arise with practices in the healthcare field. In this sense, AI should be addressed with its potential benefits and problems, knowing that it is tool, free from social prejudices, demographic changes, socio-economic inequalities, and cultural differences and without indulging in dichotomies such as technophilia and technophobia.

PMID:40960385 | DOI:10.4274/ThoracResPract.2025.2025-1-9