Tunisian researchers use AI, X-rays to create online virus scan tool
TUNIS: Tunisian engineers have created a webbased platform that scans lung X-rays and evaluates whether patients are likely to be suffering
from the novel coronavirus. While it’s not the first initiative of its kind in the world, its creators say it is the first to be openly available. And though not a diagnostic tool, the technology provides a “90 percent” reliable indication of the probability of infection, they add.
Teachers and students at the Tunisian engineering and technology institute INSAT have been developing the platform - Covid-19 Exam Ct/XR images by AI - since mid-March, with the support of German
development agency GIZ, the Italian Society of Medical Radiology and US tech giant IBM.
Thousands of X-rays of the lungs of both healthy people and COVID-19 patients have been fed into the platform, allowing artificial intelligence to learn to recognize the marks of the virus on the lungs. Improvements still need to be made for patients presenting with few symptoms, but the technology “allows the classification of a large number of images in a very short time, at low cost,” Mustapha
Hamdi, an academic and one of the platform’s developers, told AFP on Friday.
“The more images we upload to the platform, the more exact and reliable it becomes.” It is still in the test phase, under evaluation by Tunisia’s health ministry. But if approved, the technology would be particularly useful in areas of the country that lack major hospitals and specialist doctors. “The initial idea was to allow the remote interior regions (of Tunisia) to do mass analysis”, Hamdi said. —AFP