Point: What Went Wrong With the ABR Examinations?

J Am Coll Radiol

Department of Radiology, Indiana University, Indianapolis, Indiana. Electronic address:

Published: November 2016

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jacr.2016.05.019DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

point wrong
4
wrong abr
4
abr examinations?
4
point
1
abr
1
examinations?
1

Similar Publications

The right way to ride the wrong bike: An exploration of Klein's 'unridable' bicycle.

PLoS One

January 2025

Department of Mechanical Engineering, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, Illinois, United States of America.

Professor Richard Klein and his students built a bicycle with a rather interesting feature: no one was able to ride it. A prize was offered. Hundreds of students and cycling enthusiasts attempted it.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A Multidisciplinary Approach to Navigating Variants of Uncertain Significance in Sudden Infant Deaths: A Case Report of 2 Siblings With an SCN10A VUS.

Am J Forensic Med Pathol

January 2025

Office of the Medical Examiner-Davidson and Williamson Counties, Nashville, TN /Forensic Medical Management Services, LLC.

The sudden death of a previously healthy infant is a devastating event for a family-the death of 2 even more unimaginable. Prior to the debunking of Meadow's law, a legal concept attributing multiple unexplained infant deaths to Munchausen by proxy, these events could lead to the wrongful prosecution of those who had lost their children to "sudden unexpected infant death (SUID)." Today, these cases, wherein multiple infants within one family pass inexplicably, raise suspicion for a possible genetic cause and point toward a need for postmortem genetic testing.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Conscientious objection: a global health perspective.

BMJ Glob Health

December 2024

Global Bioethics Collaborative, Los Angeles, California, USA.

Conscientious objection is a critical topic that has been sparsely discussed from a global health perspective, despite its special relevance to our inherently diverse field. In this Analysis paper, we argue that blanket prohibitions of a specific type of non-discriminatory conscientious objection are unjustified in the global health context. We begin both by introducing a nuanced account of conscience that is grounded in moral psychology and by providing an overview of discriminatory and non-discriminatory forms of objection.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Artificial intelligence (AI) provides considerable opportunities to assist human work. However, one crucial challenge of human-AI collaboration is that many AI algorithms operate in a black-box manner where the way how the AI makes predictions remains opaque. This makes it difficult for humans to validate a prediction made by AI against their own domain knowledge.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: To assess the diagnostic capabilities of the most recent chatbots releases, GPT-4o and Gemini Advanced, facing different retinal diseases.

Methods: Exploratory analysis on 50 cases with different surgical (n=27) and medical (n=23) retinal pathologies, whose optical coherence tomography/angiography (OCT/OCTA) scans were dragged into ChatGPT and Gemini's interfaces. Then, we asked "Please describe this image" and classified the diagnosis as: 1) Correct; 2) Partially correct; 3) Wrong; 4) Unable to assess exam type and 5) Diagnosis not given.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!