New Dartmouth Center to Hold AI Symposium

News subtitle

The April 3 event will focus on AI-driven innovations in health and medicine.

Image
Image
Williamson Translational Research Building
The Center for Precision Health and Artificial Intelligence, which launched last year, is based in the Williamson Translational Research Building. CPHAI will hold its first symposium on April 3 at the Hanover Inn. (Photo by Katie Lenhart)
Body

The Center for Precision Health and Artificial Intelligence will bring together innovators in AI-driven health care solutions for its inaugural symposium to be held on April 3 at the Hanover Inn.

Launched last July, the CPHAI fosters interdisciplinary collaborations that leverage AI and other computational technologies to drive advancements in precision medicine and disease prevention.

“Precision health has the potential to fine-tune diagnosis and treatment for a broad range of health ailments, leveraging an individual’s health history, genetic makeup, and environmental and social factors,” says Provost David Kotz ’86, the Pat and John Rosenwald Professor in the Department of Computer Science.

“Although CPHAI was just launched last year, it has already attracted a strong cohort of collaborative faculty and researchers spanning the entire Dartmouth campus—and the medical centers of Dartmouth Health—to tackle some of the most challenging questions related to AI in medicine,” says Kotz.

The one-day symposium, AI in Medicine: Bridging Innovation and Practice, will open with remarks from President Sian Leah Beilock and feature keynotes by Curtis Langlotz, professor of radiology, medicine, and biomedical data science at Stanford University, and Faisal Mahmood, associate professor of pathology at Harvard University.

Through the day’s sessions, Dartmouth’s AI experts and clinicians will share insights into transforming health care through AI, emphasizing collaborative research and innovation.

The CPHAI received initial funding from the Geisel School of Medicine and Dartmouth Cancer Center and is based in the Williamson Translational Research Building, a Dartmouth-owned building on the Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center campus in Lebanon, N.H.

Recent work by researchers affiliated with CPHAI introduces a deep learning approach to colorectal cancer diagnosis that offers quicker, more accurate detection, facilitating timely treatment. Another team of researchers built a machine learning model to identify a novel biomarker for breast cancer.

“Our aim is to highlight recent advances in the field and the exceptional work of Dartmouth investigators within our community,” says CPHAI Director Saeed Hassanpour, professor of biomedical data science, epidemiology, and computer science. “We believe this symposium will spark engaging discussions and foster connections among students, faculty, and staff.”

The event is open to the Dartmouth community. See the event schedule, a complete list of speakers, and registration details.

Harini Barath