Difference between revisions of "Artifical Intelligence in Therapy"

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<b>Artifical intelligence in therapy</b> is an overarching term used to describe the use of machine-learning algorithms or software to mimic human understanding to assist or replace humans in multiple aspects of therapy.
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<b>Artificial intelligence in therapy</b> is an overarching term used to describe the use of machine-learning algorithms or software to mimic human understanding to assist or replace humans in multiple aspects of therapy.
 
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Artificial intelligence is intelligence demonstrated by machines, based on input data and algorithms alone. Its primary goal is to perceive its environment and take action that maximizes its goals.[1] As such, different from human intelligence, artificial intelligence can sometimes work as a black box, with little reasoning behind its conclusion but accurate nonetheless.
Artifical intellgience is intelligence demonstrated by machines, based on input data and algorithms alone. Its primary goal is to perceive its environment and take action that maximizes its goals.<ref>Poole, David; Mackworth, Alan; Goebel, Randy (1998). Computational Intelligence: A Logical Approach. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-510270-3. Archived from the original on 26 July 2020.</ref> As such, different from human intelligence, artifical intelligence can sometimes work as a black box, with little reasoning behind its conclusion but accurate nonetheless.
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The primary aim of artificial intelligence in therapy is to (1) analyze the relationships between symptoms exhibited by patients and possible diagnosis, and (2) act as a substitute or addition to human therapists due to the current shortage of therapists worldwide. Companies are developing technology through decreasing therapists overloading and better monitoring of patients.
 
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As artificial intelligence use in therapy is still relatively new, some ethical concerns have arisen on the matter.
The primary aim of artifical intelligence in therapy is to (1) analyze the relationships between symptoms exhibited by patients and possible diagnosis, and (2) act as a substitute or addition to human therapists due to the current shortage of therapists worldwide. Companies are developing technology through decreasing therapists overloading and better monitoring of patients.
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As artifical intelligence use in therapy is still relatively new, some ethical concerns have arised on the matter.
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== history ==
 
== history ==

Revision as of 13:26, 24 January 2022

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Artificial intelligence in therapy is an overarching term used to describe the use of machine-learning algorithms or software to mimic human understanding to assist or replace humans in multiple aspects of therapy. Artificial intelligence is intelligence demonstrated by machines, based on input data and algorithms alone. Its primary goal is to perceive its environment and take action that maximizes its goals.[1] As such, different from human intelligence, artificial intelligence can sometimes work as a black box, with little reasoning behind its conclusion but accurate nonetheless. The primary aim of artificial intelligence in therapy is to (1) analyze the relationships between symptoms exhibited by patients and possible diagnosis, and (2) act as a substitute or addition to human therapists due to the current shortage of therapists worldwide. Companies are developing technology through decreasing therapists overloading and better monitoring of patients. As artificial intelligence use in therapy is still relatively new, some ethical concerns have arisen on the matter.

history

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[1]

development

examples

applications

chatbots

self-guided treatments

therapeutic robots

ethical concerns

conflation with real human

crisis management of artificial intelligence

data collection

limitations

see also

references

  1. things that go into citations