It helps us drive our cars, use our cell phones and socialize online, but artificial intelligence is beginning to make a big difference in cancer, too. And that may be just the beginning, as CHARLIE ROSE reports on the next edition of 60 MINUTES, Sunday, Oct. 9 (7:30PM, ET) on the CBS Television Network.
Watson, the IBM technology, is now doing much more than beating humans on TV's "Jeopardy!" Five years after that, the A.I. technology has the ability to learn and analyze mountains of data and is now BECOMING a crucial tool for doctors. Scientific research grows at a rate of some 8,000 academic papers a day-far too much for doctors to keep up with. In an analysis of more than 1,000 cancer patients, Watson found the same treatments available that doctors had recommended 99 percent of the time. But Watson did better than the doctors in other ways, says Dr. Ned Sharpless. Watch an excerpt. "The more exciting part about [the analysis] is, in 30 percent of patients, Watson found something new-so that's 300-plus people where Watson identified a treatment that a well-meaning, hard-working group of physicians hadn't found," says Sharpless, head of the University of North Carolina's Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center. The treatments identified by Watson were in clinical trial or had only become approved or revealed recently. "These were real things we would have considered actionable had we known about it at the time of the diagnosis," says Dr. Sharpless.Videos