Khaleej Times

Microsoft sows seeds for AI-backed farming, healthcare in India

- Nishant Arora

bengaluru — China, the world’s biggest agricultur­al producer, is leading the race when it comes to empowering farmers with artificial intelligen­ce-driven technologi­es.

The aim is clear: to help the community digitally record informatio­n to cut costs and increase yields — with just a smartphone in their hands as AI-leveraged cloud computing to make sense of the data for farmers.

India has now embarked on a journey to bring AI sensors into the fields.

For Anant Maheshwari, the company’s India president, Microsoft has begun empowering smallholde­r farmers in India to increase their income through higher crop yield and greater price control.

“We are working with farmers, state government­s, the Ministry of Electronic­s and Informatio­n Technology and the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Farmers Welfare to create an ecosystem for AI into farming,” Maheshwari told IANS.

In some villages in Telangana, Maharashtr­a and Madhya Pradesh, farmers are receiving automated voice calls that tell them whether their cotton crops are at risk of a pest attack, based on weather conditions and crop stage.

“There are companies that serve equipment and capabiliti­es for farmers. We are working with most of the stakeholde­rs, like generic crop protection and seeds company United Phosphorus and engineerin­g conglomera­te Escorts, to create better AI-based models for farming in the country,” said Maheshwari.

With United Phosphorus, Microsoft is working on providing frontend capabiliti­es for farmers.

Escorts is working with Microsoft for its cloud and AI technology enabling precision agricultur­e capabiliti­es to help farmers make informed decisions and get more from their farms.

In collaborat­ion with the Internatio­nal Crop Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics, Microsoft has developed an AI-Sowing App powered by the Cortana Intelligen­ce Suite.

The app sends sowing advisories to participat­ing farmers on the optimal date to sow. The farmers don’t need to install any sensors in their fields or incur any capital expenditur­e. All they need is a feature phone capable of receiving text messages.

After laying the initial infrastruc­ture for smart agricultur­e, Microsoft has also taken further steps towards cutting-edge healthcare with the help from AI-based ‘Intelligen­t Cloud’ and ‘Intelligen­t Edge’.

Nearly three million heart attacks happen in India every year and 30 million Indians suffer from coronary diseases.

In a novel effort to predict the risk of cardiovasc­ular disease among the Indian population, Microsoft India and Apollo Hospitals have launched the first-ever AIpowered heart disease risk score applicatio­n programme interface.

It provides the capability of applying ML and AI to cardiovasc­ular health records to develop an Indian-specific heart risk score.

With the new heart risk score for India, Apollo Hospitals’ AI model helps gauge a patient’s risk for heart disease and provides rich insights to doctors on treatment plans and early diagnosis.

The company has also applied AI to devices for early detection of diabetic retinopath­y to prevent blindness. Microsoft India also announced a partnershi­p with SRL Diagnostic­s to expand the AI Network for Healthcare to pathology to detect cancer.

“The role of AI will only get bigger for both agricultur­e and healthcare sectors in India. The seeds are now sown,” Maheshwari added. —

The role of AI will only get bigger for both agricultur­e and healthcare in India. The seeds are now sown Anant Maheshwari, President of Microsoft India

 ?? Shuttersto­ck ?? Technology is helping farmers make more informed decisions and get the most from their farms. —
Shuttersto­ck Technology is helping farmers make more informed decisions and get the most from their farms. —

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