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Scientists Claim AI Can Tell Cancer Patients Their Odds of Living by Looking At Their Selfies

Scientists Claim AI Can Tell Cancer Patients Their Odds of Living by Looking At Their Selfies

Yahoo10-05-2025

Some of us look old for our age, while others look younger.
These differences, though, may not just be superficial. Our appearances, youthful or seasoned, could actually be an accurate reflection of what scientists call our "biological age," a form of measuring someone's age by the health of their body's cells, as opposed to counting their years since birth.
Exploring this, a team of scientists at Mass General Brigham (MGB) have now developed an AI model that they claim can estimate the biological age of cancer patients simply by analyzing photos of their faces, the New York Times reports, in what could be a game-changing tool in cancer treatment.
Huge questions remain, however, about the technology's reliability and its fraught ethical implications.
All the same, the AI, dubbed FaceAge, has led to some intriguing findings. As detailed in a new study published in the journal Lancet Digital Health, the researchers found that participants whose faces were judged to be younger by the AI model tended to do better after cancer treatment than those who were judged to be older.
Overall, the participants who were suffering from cancer appeared to be five years older than their chronological age, while non-sufferers exhibited a biological age closer to their chronological age. With cancer patients, the AI accurately predicted that those with an older biological age were more likely to die.
Doctors could use the tool, the researchers hypothesize, to help determine the best-suited treatment. A spry 75-year-old with a biological age of 65, in an example given by Agence France-Presse, could benefit from aggressive radiation therapy. But that course might be too risky for another man with as many years but a higher biological age.
The AI model was trained on nearly 59,000 portraits of adults over 60 taken from public data sets, including sources like IMDB and Wikipedia. Then, to cut its teeth, the researchers had the model estimate the age of the study's roughly 6,200 cancer patients.
One of the most surprising finds was that the AI didn't rely as much on what we typically consider signs of aging, like baldness or wrinkles. It placed more stock in subtler clues like facial muscle tone, per the AFP.
There's still a long way to go before FaceAge is ready to be used by doctors, with plenty of thorny questions that need addressing. The AI was trained on mostly white faces, which could lead to racial biases in its analyses. It also remains to be seen how makeup, plastic surgery, or even just a change in lighting could foil the AI's predictions.
"I'd be very worried about whether this tool works equally well for all populations, for example women, older adults, racial and ethnic minorities, those with various disabilities, pregnant women and the like," Jennifer Miller, co-director of the program for biomedical ethics at Yale University, told the NYT.
And in our age of invasive surveillance and dwindling privacy, having a tool that purportedly unearths some secret facet of your biology by scanning your face can feel like another intrusion on our autonomy. What if insurers use a model like FaceAge to justify denying health coverage?
"It is for sure something that needs attention, to assure that these technologies are used only in the benefit for the patient," study co-lead author Hugo Aerts, director of MGB's AI in Medicine program, told the AFP.
More on medical AI: Apple Quietly Working on AI Agent to "Replica" a Human Doctor

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Miley Cyrus says this type of therapy saved her life. What is EMDR?
Miley Cyrus says this type of therapy saved her life. What is EMDR?

USA Today

time2 hours ago

  • USA Today

Miley Cyrus says this type of therapy saved her life. What is EMDR?

Miley Cyrus is opening up about how she overcame stage fright with a cutting-edge therapy technique that she says saved her life. In an interview with the New York Times last month, Cyrus shared that eye movement desensitization and reprocessing, or EMDR, has been pivotal for her healing and mental health. The therapy was developed by psychologist Francine Shapiro in the 1980s to help people alleviate distress around painful memories. The therapy has been used by clinicians for decades but has become an increasingly popular and sought-after treatment to deal with traumatic or adverse life experiences. "Love it. Saved my life," Cyrus said of EDMR. "It's like watching a movie in your mind. ... I came out of it, and I've never had stage fright again. Ever. I don't have stage fright anymore." Cyrus isn't the only celebrity who's been open about undergoing EMDR. In 2021, Prince Harry shared in his Apple TV+ docuseries on mental health with Oprah Winfrey that he uses EMDR to address the discomfort he feels when he flies into London, which he said reminds him of the loss of his mother. "It's almost a wave that can't be stopped because people are hearing their friends talk about it, they're seeing the changes in their family members," Wendy Byrd, a professional counselor and president of the board of directors at the EMDR International Association, previously told USA TODAY. "When I was trained in 2008, I would have to go in and explain what EMDR was and tell my clients why I thought it was such a good therapy. ... Now, I would say almost everyone that comes into my door is asking me for EMDR." What is EMDR? EMDR engages what's called the adaptive information processing system to bring up past traumatic experiences in a safe space, so your brain can essentially reprocess them. 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Byrd said in an EMDR session a clinician will ask questions to bring up the components of a memory, including sensory information – such as sight, sound and smell. A clinician will ask how your body felt during the experience, how you felt during the experience – the emotional information that connects to that memory. Eventually, the clinician will add in eye movements or tapping. This is called bilateral stimulation. Studies show that eye movements facilitate information processing and calm down a person's physiology. "It will make something that feels upsetting, less upsetting. It helps the brain make images that are very vivid, less vivid," Byrd said. "And part of that is because of what we call dual attention, meaning I'm present in the room with the therapist, or over Zoom, nowadays, and I'm thinking about that experience and it's all the ingredients that the brain needs to engage that adaptive information processing mechanism." More: Prince Harry said he is triggered flying into London and uses EMDR to cope. What is it? Part of the reprocessing occurs by the clinician introducing positive things into the recall. A therapist will ask, "What do you want to think now about that experience?" "It brings in the current information. Maybe the positive is that it's over, or maybe it's that you learned from it or that now you now you're worthy," she said. Byrd said EMDR works on various types of trauma, and most people are good candidates for the treatment. EMDR can be effective whether someone is seeking to address a single traumatic event, such as a car crash, or a chronic experience, such as bullying. What is the hope for a patient after they complete EMDR? Patients work with their clinicians to identify future outcomes they desire – how they want to think, feel and behave in the world. For Byrd's part, she said looking to build resilience in clients. "I want their triggers to be very difficult to find," she said. What health & wellness means for you: Sign up for USA TODAY's Keeping It Together newsletter Byrd encourages anyone with a painful memory to consider EMDR. "People feel like sometimes what happened to them isn't big enough. They should just be able to get over it. ... And that just breaks my heart because I know that they can feel better and that they do deserve to feel better," she said. "I just wish that people knew that they could come in, we could figure out some of the things that are happening that are causing them pain, and that it would be not that long of a journey before they could get some relief."

3 Ways To Use AI So It Won't Dumb You Down At School Or Work
3 Ways To Use AI So It Won't Dumb You Down At School Or Work

Forbes

time2 hours ago

  • Forbes

3 Ways To Use AI So It Won't Dumb You Down At School Or Work

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In May, The New York Times reported the story of Ella Stapleton, a college senior irked by what appears to be an academic double standard. 'Ms. Stapleton filed a formal complaint with Northeastern's business school, citing the undisclosed use of A.I. as well as other issues she had with his teaching style, and requested reimbursement of tuition for that class. As a quarter of the total bill for the semester, that would be more than $8,000.' The Hidden Costs to Letting AI Do Your Thinking 'Necessity is the mother of invention' is a famous saying describing the natural tendency to fashion solutions to life's challenges. Ever since we crawled out of caves toward the bright lights of civilization, humankind has sought tools to lighten our mental and physical loads. The wheel is the most obvious example of devising an implement to assist with transportation difficulties. More recently, teleconferencing applications like Zoom and Microsoft Teams enabled remote work during the COVID-19 pandemic. Most of us would agree these two innovations produced a net positive effect, resulting in a progressively better society. Can we say the same about students and professors turning to AI for help with critical thinking? Not according to a revealing new study from MIT's Media Lab. The researchers engaged 54 subjects ranging in age from 18-54 to write SAT essays using ChatGPT, Google Search, and just their own faculties. As Time reports: '…ChatGPT users had the lowest brain engagement and 'consistently underperformed at neural, linguistic, and behavioral levels.' Over the course of several months, ChatGPT users got lazier with each subsequent essay, often resorting to copy-and-paste by the end of the study.' Slide Rules to Smartphones: This Isn't a New Problem As recently as the 1960s and early 1970s, engineers and astronauts relied on slide rules for complex math calculations like those presented in the film Apollo 13. Unlike the calculator and even ChatGPT which instantly spits out answers, slide rules force humans to still use their brains, sharpening one's mental abilities, approximation skills, and logical reasoning. 'Use it or lose it' is another famous saying apt to this discussion. Now that every smartphone comes equipped with a built-in calculator, there's little incentive for people from any walk of life to regularly use math skills. Without such practice, they often atrophy once we've completed our formal schooling. Ditto for applications like Waze and Maps. It's gotten to the point that many people rely entirely on their phones for basic navigation from home to work. Are We Growing Too Dependent on Tech? As far back as 2018, pundits warned about the dangers of cognitive diminishment due to an overreliance on artificial intelligence. Statesman Henry Kissinger was one such person. 'AI, by mastering certain competencies more rapidly and definitively than humans, could over time diminish human competence and the human condition itself as it turns it into data,' he wrote in a revealing piece for The Atlantic. Less than 10 years later his prescience is disturbingly spot-on. Much like the Internet's stunning ubiquity, AI is fast becoming the go-to tool of choice, not just for students and teachers, but for business professionals everywhere. Talk about necessity! Among other things, artificial intelligence now helps companies achieve unprecedented levels of productivity, including automating repetitive takes, improving customer service, personalizing marketing outreach, optimizing talent management, strengthening cybersecurity, and enhancing market research—to name a few. But as Kissinger warned and the MIT survey reveals, there's danger here. If students increasingly outsource thinking to computers, what will happen to future people? Will we end up like the pathetically helpless and overfed automatons floating onboard the Wall-E spaceship? Will other dystopian fare like Idiocracy come true? Not if we wake up to the problem and do something about it. Now. 3 Ways to Use AI as a Second Brain, Not a Crutch The AI genie is out of the bottle. Students, professors, and business professionals alike are going to use it. There's no stopping that. What we can do is rethink our relationship to innovation. We've heard about smart technology for more than a decade. Now it's time for what I dub wise technology: a strategy for how humans can use AI—without being used by it themselves. Here are my top three suggestions. Schooling's real purpose is not to get good grades. It's to actually learn. If you turn off your mind and turn on AI to do your assignments, you're the one who will suffer long-term. First things first: change your mindset. Avoid academic shortcuts. Instead, do the hard work to educate yourself. And don't just stop when you graduate. Carry that lifelong mentality to the workforce and beyond. There's nothing more important than developing your own faculties. AI can boost your imagination, serving as the ultimate thought partner. It only becomes a threat to your cognitive abilities when you close your own mind to its genius. Instead, reopen it, using AI as a brainstormer and a collaborator. Leverage it as a force multiplier to develop world-changing ideas, products, and art, not as a talent calculator. The former requires your active participation. The latter relegates you to little more than an order taker. We know AI hallucinates. It gets things wrong. This isn't only the reason not to just blindly follow AI. Pushing back against AI enables you to flex your own mental muscles. Doing so helps you learn the why behind the answers it gives you. This process strengthens your mental abilities, learning from an outsourced brain in a digital mentor/mentee relationship. What a Wise Philosopher Can Teach Us About Smart Tech More than 2,000 years ago, Socrates—a wise man himself—expanded people's minds by asking them a series of questions. His process was called the Socratic Method, and it led to the development of modern philosophy. Nowadays we may look back at him and say, 'Wow. What a genius!' Socrates didn't see it that way. Instead, all his intellectual searching led him to sagaciously remark: 'The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing.' Now as we stand at an inflection point with AI advancing by the second, people young and old would do well to adopt a similar wise mindset. Specifically, we must strive to be ceaselessly curious about our world and ourselves. 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1 Internet Stock with Impressive Fundamentals and 2 to Turn Down
1 Internet Stock with Impressive Fundamentals and 2 to Turn Down

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

1 Internet Stock with Impressive Fundamentals and 2 to Turn Down

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