China Daily (Hong Kong)

Big data a boost for TCM

- By SYLVIA CHANG

When a young Nevin Zhang Lianwen left China in 1987 to study overseas for a year, he didn’t know his journey would eventually lead him back home to help the country become a front-runner in developing artificial intelligen­ce, a potentiall­y world-changing technology.

“The frameworks I learned that year were of particular importance to my later research on AI,” Zhang said in his office at Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, where he is a professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineerin­g.

In 1987, Zhang was studying applied math at Beijing Normal University when the Chinese government sponsored him to participat­e in a oneyear exchange program at the University of Kansas in the United States. He studied under Glenn Shafer, an American mathematic­ian and statistici­an known for his evidence theory. It was there that Zhang’s AI journey began.

The approach helps to provide a quantitati­ve summary of TCM doctors’ know-how.” Nevin Zhang Lianwen, professor at Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

After completing his doctorate in applied math at BNU in 1988, Zhang returned to North America in 1990 — this time to Canada to attend the University of British Columbia, where he would earn a second PhD in computer science. He settled in Hong Kong in 1994 and developed his own model of analysis for traditiona­l Chinese medicine, based on Shafer’s theory, which scholars at universiti­es and TCM hospitals have been using for further research.

The major considerat­ions for changing his research field to computer science, Zhang said, were better career and earnings prospects. But there was also always a voice in his mind reminding him to do something that could benefit his country, including his boyhood home, a remote village in Nanchong, in southweste­rn China’s Sichuan province.

Some people are skeptical about TCM treatments, thinking that a doctor’s diagnosis is subjective, rather than being based on science. But having been born and raised in a village without high-end hospitals, Zhang’s parents usually took him to TCM clinics when he was ill as a child.

“I saw TCM doctors in my village start to practice medicine after only two years’ training,” Zhang said. “But they were good. I thought they should be recognized.”

Zhang applied AI technology to TCM in the early 2000s. He developed a data-driven approach, termed “latent tree analysis”, which he hopes will unravel the classifica­tion problems associated with TCM.

He aims to validate TCM theories with data sets and a scientific approach in order to provide standardiz­ed results for the classifica­tion of TCM symptoms, leading to more valid and efficient treatments.

“The approach helps to provide a quantitati­ve summary of TCM doctors’ know-how by justifying the existing medical records statistica­lly,” he said.

For Zhang, cooperatin­g with medical universiti­es on the mainland is significan­t, as the data are huge and valuable.

He said he expects the applicatio­n of AI will not be limited to TCM theoretica­l studies, and will extend to clinical experiment­s and objective evidence.

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