Articles

  • Nov 25, 2024 | kcl.ac.uk | Thomas C Booth

    Researchers from the School, in collaboration with academics from Imperial College London, are exploring whether artificial intelligence (AI) can help doctors predict which brain aneurysms are likely to rupture—a life-threatening event that requires urgent treatment. Aneurysms, which are bulges in blood vessels in the brain, affect about 3.2% of the population. While only some rupture, the decision to treat is complicated because treatments like surgery also carry risks for the patient.

  • Oct 9, 2024 | kcl.ac.uk | Thomas C Booth

    Dr Thomas Booth has been appointed as Faculty Lead for Clinical Radiology Artificial Intelligence (CRAI) for the Royal College of Radiologists. In his role as Faculty Lead, Dr Booth will play a key part in the development of new learning modules for the Clinical Radiology Artificial Intelligence (CRAI) faculty, part of a cutting-edge learning programme developed by the Royal College of Radiologists (RCR).

  • Aug 6, 2024 | everand.com | Siddarth Shrikanth |Gregory S. Stone |Paul Clammer |Thomas C Booth

    Fiji — the very name evoked in my mind that mid-century notion of a paradise both pristine and remote. In truth, Fiji has long ceased to be particularly inaccessible. Commercial tourism began in the 1960s, and over half a million tourists were arriving in Fiji every year by the turn of the millennium. I had come here to see how responsible, community-centred, ecological tourism could offer a powerful case for nature. The journey on a rickety propeller plane to the eastern island of Taveuni showed us

  • Jul 10, 2024 | kcl.ac.uk | Thomas C Booth

    Researchers from King’s College London have received £75,000 in funding from the new MRC Impact Accelerator Fund to further investigate the use of artificial intelligence (AI) and robotics to treat stroke patients autonomously. In a recent study, the research team explore how surgical robots guided autonomously by AI could be used to enhance surgery safety and reduce procedure times.

  • Jun 17, 2024 | kcl.ac.uk | Thomas C Booth

    Cardiovascular diseases are the most common cause of death across Europe, and account for more that 4 million deaths each year. Researchers are exploring how surgical robots guided autonomously by artificial intelligence (AI) could be used to enhance surgery safety and reduce procedure times.

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