The study revealed at ‘The International Conference on Nuclear Cardiology and Cardiac CT’ (ICNC) 2019, says that machine learning could predict death or heart attack with more than 90 per cent accuracy.
Machine Learning is not a new trend. Google’s search engine, face recognition on smartphones and many of our day to day systems use machine learning algorithms to predict the behaviour of a system.
The study was conducted by Dr Luis Eduardo Juarez-Orozco of the Turku PET Centre. He said, “Despite the presence of humongous amount of data, it’s not being used to its full potential yet.”
Doctors use risk scores to make decisions. The scores are based on just a handful of variables.
On the other hand, machine learning can use large amounts of data and identify complex patterns that might not have been possible for humans.
Dr Juarez-Orozco further explained, “Humans have a very hard time thinking further than three dimensions or four dimensions. The moment we jump into the fifth dimension we are lost.
On the other side, “we have discovered that very high dimensional patterns are better than single dimensional patterns to predict outcomes in individuals.”