Speaking to LBC, Paul Taylor said the technology - which is being discussed at a safety summit this week - is already working the equivalent shifts of 600 officers every year."All forces are benefiting from AI already, it’s integrated into systems around unmanned vehicles and drones and in language translation for rapid crisis situations,” he said.“We’re using AI in facial recognition technology, identifying hundreds of offenders every month.
Jorge Cardosa, a researcher at King’s College London, showed LBC a system they’ve developed which compares MRI scans, to quantify issues to aid diagnoses - rather than relying on a human’s educated guess.“A lot of these AI systems will do many of the really boring jobs that clinicians and nurses currently do and release their time to focus more on the patients. But it’s also making it easier to diagnose issues and give clinicians all the information they need.