Skip to main content
×

GE.com has been updated to serve our three go-forward companies.

Please visit these standalone sites for more information

GE Aerospace | GE Vernova | GE HealthCare 

Press Release

GE Healthcare and Leading Korean Hospital Aim to Accelerate AI Ecosystem Using GE’s New Edison Digital Health Platform

March 31, 2022
Press Release

GE Healthcare Announces Three New Alliances to Help Improve Cancer Care

November 30, 2021

Collaborations with SOPHiA GENETICS, The University of Cambridge and Optellum are intended expand access to the latest and most advanced technologies for cancer care

Chicago, Nov 30 2021 — GE Healthcare announced collaborations with SOPHiA GENETICS, The University of Cambridge and Optellum as part of its vision to advance care, make precision health more accessible, and ultimately improve outcomes for cancer patients.


business unit
tags
header-image
Electrification Software Healthcare

The Edge of Healthcare: Localized Computing Can Give Doctors Access To AI And Faster Diagnoses

Peter C. Beller
January 27, 2021

Many doctors and industry experts agree that artificial intelligence-assisted medicine will change healthcare.

header-image
future of healthcare

The Future Is Now: Healthcare Systems Tested By COVID-19 Are Finding A Powerful Tool In AI

Daniel Kruger
January 21, 2021

Imagine a world where a genomic sequencer small enough to fit in the palm of your hand maps the DNA of a virus in mere hours. Where you can test for a variety of maladies, from skin cancer to urinary tract infections, without going to the doctor. Where monitors use digital algorithms to adjust oxygen levels for ICU patients.

Now stop imagining. Thanks to artificial intelligence, we’re quickly approaching that world.

header-image
Healthcare

Advanced Placement: AI Helps Doctors Adjust Breathing Tubes In Critical COVID-19 Patients

Brett Nelson
November 25, 2020

Like many tasks in medicine, threading a breathing tube down a patient’s trachea requires skills, patience and steady hands. Insert the tube not far enough and the patient can throw up food into their lungs, causing infection; insert it too far and you might trigger a collapsed lung or cardiac arrest. Doctors often order a chest X-ray to make sure the tube is positioned right.

header-image
COVID-19

A Ray Of Light: AI-Enhanced Ultrasound Is Helping On The Front Line Against COVID-19

March 26, 2020
Ultrasound might not seem an obvious weapon against COVID-19, the disease caused by the new coronavirus, and its ensuing complications. Best known for helping doctors and expectant parents to view babies in utero, ultrasound sees inside the body by emitting and recording the echoes of high-frequency soundwaves. It’s similar to how bats navigate at night.
header-image
ai

You Can Teach A Computer New Tricks: How Boyhood Pets Paved This Scientist’s Approach To AI

Scott Woolley
February 25, 2020
For a man who would grow up to become a leading expert on teaching computers to think, Peter Tu spent his childhood on some unlikely hobbies. Rather than holing up in his bedroom to code, the young Tu would often run around his Toronto neighborhood with his dog or oversee the reptile pit he built in his backyard. Of particular interest to the future computer scientist were the ways his menagerie of animals learned new tricks and skills.
header-image
Electrification Software Healthcare

The English Patients: This UK Hospital Is Harnessing AI To Make Decisions

February 10, 2020
If you watched the opening ceremony of the London Olympic Games in 2012, you will know that British people love their National Health Service (NHS) as much as they cherish Peter Pan, The Beatles and James Bond. The ceremony’s climax was an eccentric and poignant dance routine that celebrated the NHS’s special place in the nation’s heart. At one point, dancers bounced on trampolines made up to look like hospital beds.
header-image
Electrification Software Healthcare

True Detectives: These Human Owls Are Using AI-Enhanced Ultrasound To Catch Cancer

January 10, 2020

Not much gets past Chad McClennan and his elite detective squad of owls (yes, you read that right). The “chief executive owl” of the healthcare startup Koios Medical, McClennan explains that several of his engineers were military sleuths before applying their talents to breast cancer detection. “They were working for a U.S. Army defense contractor, using facial recognition technology to catch bad guys in foreign lands,” he says. “They realized that the same techniques could be applied to radiology.”

header-image
Electrification Software Healthcare

Signal Boost: This AI Can Help Take Magnetic Resonance Images To The Next Level

January 07, 2020

GE Healthcare's AIR Recon DL software separates signal from noise without compromising diagnostic quality or increasing scan time.

Subscribe to ai