With the public availability of ChatGPT 3.5 in fall 2022 at the latest, artificial intelligence in the sense of large language models (LLMs) is on everyone’s lips. However, it is often forgotten that this is only the provisional end point of decades of development of artificial intelligence, which, despite its great potential, still has many limitations. The question for practising doctors is how this technology can be used sensibly in everyday clinical practice – and how it should not be used.
Autoren
- Dr. med. Lukas Dürst
- Dr. med. Marc Oertle
Publikation
- DERMATOLOGIE PRAXIS
Related Topics
You May Also Like
- Artificial intelligence
Dr. ChatGPT: Large language models in everyday clinical practice
- Liver cirrhosis
Prophylaxis of decompensation – focus on portal hypertension
- Monitoring via smartphone app
PROs help patients with metastatic breast cancer
- From symptom to diagnosis
Abdominal pain – pancreatic pseudocyst
- Case report: 72-year-old with pancytopenia and pyrexia
Visceral leishmaniasis or autoimmune hepatitis?
- Neuromodulatory approaches
Neurocardiology: key mechanisms and clinical implications
- Acute myeloid leukemia
The influence of time from diagnosis to treatment on overall survival
- Artificial intelligence