AI chatbots give inaccurate medical advice says Oxford Uni study
An Oxford study involving 1,298 UK participants found AI chatbots provide mixed, inconsistent medical advice, performing no better than search engines or personal knowledge.
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7 Articles
ChatGPT Is Terrible at Giving Medical Advice, Study Confirms
One in six American adults asks ChatGPT for medical advice at least once a month. Spoiler alert: that’s a terrible idea. A new study out from Oxford University confirms what your actual doctor has been saying for months now — AI chatbots are shockingly bad at helping real humans figure out real health problems. As in, worse than just Googling your symptoms bad. “Despite all the hype, AI just isn’t ready to take on the role of the physician,” say…
A new Oxford AI study reveals its two-way communication gap - The Canadian Media
IBNS-CMEDIA: The largest user study to date on large language models (LLMs) assisting the general public with medical decisions has found that these systems pose significant risks due to their tendency to provide inaccurate and inconsistent information. A new study conducted by the Oxford Internet Institute and the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences
A study published on February 9th by Oxford University shows that artificial intelligence (AI) chatbots are still unable to provide reliable health diagnoses like traditional methods.
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