Editor’s note: December 2022
Armchair futurists began predicting the demise of radiology at the hands of AI around five years ago. Soon enough a couple of lone voices became a chorus. Most observers with a vested interest in the specialty’s longevity listened, considered the evidence and, politely but firmly, dismissed the danger as overblown.
December 2022 presented a chance to reconsider the scenario with the advantage of better peripheral vision. It arrived Dec. 19 in an opinion piece published by RSNA in Radiology. (This outlet covered it. See “Radiologists exhorted …” below.) As foreseen by the authors—two of the specialty’s most erudite and dispassionate thought leaders—AI and other emerging technologies might deserve neither fight nor flight if they were growing up in a vacuum: no maturing life sciences, demanding environmental concerns or unforgiving economics. If only.
—Dave Pearson, editor
Editor’s note: December 2022
Armchair futurists began predicting the demise of radiology at the hands of AI around five years ago. Soon enough a couple of lone voices became a chorus. Most observers with a vested interest in the specialty’s longevity listened, considered the evidence and, politely but firmly, dismissed the danger as overblown.
December 2022 presented a chance to reconsider the scenario with the advantage of better peripheral vision. It arrived Dec. 19 in an opinion piece published by RSNA in Radiology. (This outlet covered it. See “Radiologists exhorted …” below.) As foreseen by the authors—two of the specialty’s most erudite and dispassionate thought leaders—AI and other emerging technologies might deserve neither fight nor flight if they were growing up in a vacuum: no maturing life sciences, demanding environmental concerns or unforgiving economics. If only.
—Dave Pearson, editor