110 sats \ 0 replies \ @monk_cactus 10 Jan 2023 \ parent \ on: Jeff Booth bitcoin
Not necessarily, as I'm assuming you want to practice medicine in your career, not become an AI engineer. Anyone of the free machine learning/AI courses couldn't hurt just to remove some of the mystery around how things are developed. This is one example, but there are a ton of these: https://www.coursera.org/learn/practical-machine-learning
If you're trying to better understand AI and it's application to radiology, trying to understand the math and rationale behind the models is probably a better place to start. That way as it becomes a part of your field, you'll have a command of the concepts, and will also be able to spot the pitfalls (still lots of hype and overselling). It'll also smooth the transition if/when it becomes part of your work.