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Exploring protein folding with Tau

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School for Science and Math at Vanderbilt

AI Forum

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The School for Science and Math at Vanderbilt, a program of the Collaborative for STEM Education and Outreach, hosted an incredible AI Forum organized by Ana Villanueva, Ph.D., to introduce the power of AI to High School students. An additional goal of this forum was to modify the existing AI Bill of Rights to be accessible to a student population, which was facilitated by Sarah Burriss, Ph.D., of the NSF-funded AI Institute. Vanderbilt Basic Sciences Kendra H. Oliver, Ph.D., M.P.S., representing the AI Center for Protein Dynamics and Simulation, facilitated a session on visual science communication that served as a foundation for student-generated infographics on the five AI Bill of Rights principles.

AI Bill of Rights 

Why it matters for biomedical scientists? 

The AI Bill of Rights is a set of principles and guidelines to ensure artificial intelligence's ethical development, deployment, and use. It establishes a framework to protect individuals' rights and promote transparency, accountability, and fairness in AI systems. The AI Bill of Rights holds significant importance for biomedical scientists as it provides a crucial foundation for the responsible and ethical use of AI in healthcare and biomedical research. It ensures that AI technologies are designed and implemented to respect patients' privacy, safeguard against bias, promote informed consent, and uphold the principles of beneficence and non-maleficence. By adhering to the AI Bill of Rights, biomedical scientists can harness AI's potential while prioritizing patients' well-being and rights, ensuring that AI-driven advancements in healthcare are developed and deployed responsibly and ethically.

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