The Shah Group has a new systematic review — https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2825147 — in JAMA on Testing and Evaluation of Health Care Applications of Large Language Models, which the editor has chosen to make free.
The review categorizes 500+ papers based on the data used in the evaluation, the health care task performed, the linguistic task evaluated, the dimensions of evaluation, and the medical specialty that did the study.
Congratulations, Shah Group!
| Stanford Medicine researchers, after creating an AI-based algorithm to find complex structural variants in the human genome, learned those variants likely contribute to psychiatric disease. |
The 3 billion base pairs that constitute the human genome — the matching jigsaw puzzle pieces of adenine pairing with thymine and cytosine pairing with guanine — are not just the body’s instruction manual. Rearrangements in the order of those base pairs are markers of the origins of disease and of our evolutionary history. They can be simple, when a handful of base pairs switch places. They can also be complex, such as when a stretch of tens of thousands of base pairs inverts and is missing multiple sections.
Read the story here: https://med.stanford.edu/ne
Leslie (M.S. student) and Cally (M.S. student) each had their research accepted for presentation at ABRCMS (Annual Biomedical Research Conference for Minoritized Scientists) in Pittsburgh, PA.
Perla (PhD student) had her research accepted for presentation at SACNAS’ (Society for the Advancement of Chicanos/Hispanics and Native Americans in Science) annual NDiSTEM conference in Phoenix, AZ. Perla is also the recipient of the Travel Scholarship for the 2024 NDiSTEM Conference.




