Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
AI Google Microsoft Apple

Have a First Aid Question? Don't Ask Siri Or Cortana. (mashable.com) 43

AmiMoJo quotes Mashable: A new study from the University of Alberta, published Tuesday in the medical journal The BMJ, tested smart assistants Siri, Cortana, Alexa, and Google Assistant on their ability to respond helpfully to first aid questions. While Google Assistant and Amazon's Alexa way outperformed Apple's Siri and Microsoft's Cortana, the results as a whole were underwhelming.

The researchers asked all of the smart assistants 123 questions on 39 first aid topics such as heart attacks, poisoning, and nose bleeds. Google Assistant and Alexa recognized the topics over 90 percent of the time, and gave accurate and helpful responses in about half of those instances. Meanwhile, Siri and Cortana's responses were so poor that it "prohibited their analysis."

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Have a First Aid Question? Don't Ask Siri Or Cortana.

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Using one of these gizmos for medical advice would be insane.

    • They should say NOT medical advice as part of there read out.

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      Or in dire straits.

  • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Sunday February 02, 2020 @03:47PM (#59682286)

    ... unplugging them and plugging them back in?

  • "Finish her off"

    Sounds about right.

  • by LynnwoodRooster ( 966895 ) on Sunday February 02, 2020 @03:55PM (#59682322) Journal
    Use Siri for emergency first aid for your sprained ankle and you end up with a tourniquet around your bicep. But it's OK, Siri will also give you directions to the hospital that take you to a corn silo in Iowa, so it's all good...
  • If my physician was trying to use an Internet Search on a non-approved device for diagnosis.

    But, given my current GP, I wouldn't be all that surprised.

    Specialists on the other hand, had better know their shit inside and out.

    • by Kjella ( 173770 )

      If my physician was trying to use an Internet Search on a non-approved device for diagnosis. But, given my current GP, I wouldn't be all that surprised. Specialists on the other hand, had better know their shit inside and out.

      Meh, the vast majority of the time when the media tries to make a scare out of this it turns out that it's poor man's "healthcare" where the alternative is no care. Like street dentistry or whatever, do anyone seriously think they'd go there if they could afford a normal dentist's office? If your doctor is on Google he's at least trying to science rather than apply voodoo.

    • IMO doctors who "know their shit inside and out" are the scariest ones, because the patients that are most in need of good care are the outliers. Most of their experience is not relevant to the few moments of their career where they're saving somebody, or killing them.

    • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) * on Sunday February 02, 2020 @05:04PM (#59682506)
      A tutor of mine once told me when I was a student: "Just about anyone can forgive you for not knowing the least tiny details of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease if you're a GP. But if you don't know how to handle a heart attack or a diabetic, you're in serious trouble...". If you have a bad GP I'd blame the GP, not GP's in general.... there are some good ones too :)
    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      You'd be surprised how often physicians google things.

      • They also know which sites in a Google search are reliable and which are not, and how to interpret the technical terms on the reliable sites.

        Most patients don't know this.

        • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

          True, mostly (certainly the second part). Physicians can be surprisingly credulous outside their area of expertise though. I know one who is convinced Linus Pauling was right and prescribes megadoses of vitamin C for pretty much everything. Specialists also exhibit a pretty strong bias towards diagnosing within their specialty, which is why many people end up going through a series of referrals to different specialties before they get a correct diagnosis.

  • "A bright spot: Siri, Google Assistant, and Alexa all have the ability to call 911. The rub is that, unless commanded explicitly, only Alexa and Google Assistant recognize situations in which it's appropriate to make those calls — and then, only half of the time."

    Really that's a bright spot? Sounds like a lot of wasted 911 opperator resources.

    "Hey Siri what's the best way to throw a knife at my friends head in call of duy"

    Siri "911 has been contacted!"

    • by nwf ( 25607 )

      "Hey Siri what's the best way to throw a knife at my friends head in call of duty"

      Siri "911 has been contacted!"

      More like:

      "I set a timer for 2:30" since that's about all Siri can do any more. Or maybe "I don't see anyone named Duty in your address book." Siri is that bad.

  • by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Sunday February 02, 2020 @05:26PM (#59682558)

    If First Aid fails, Siri will tell you where you can dispose of the body.

  • what to do?" ... ...

    Oh, I haven't thought of that. ...
    You know, that I'm smaller than a Tauntaun, do you?"

  • Eliminating the idiots that take medical advice from unreliable sources.

    • How utterly unchristian of you :) Rephrase: moronism in society is an explosive risk - morons don't just threaten themselves, they threaten us all. Because morons, like everyone, possess legal and economic leverage and it would stand to reason that, as morons, they are easier to convince to use that leverage to perpetuate some attacker's agenda (anti-vax, poisons as meds, hype politics, etc)
  • Samsung's Bixby and Google Assistant too
  • .. rely on adbots for survival, see what happens.
  • these things are worse then useless; they spy on you, they give very little in return and for those times you could really use their help, they are unable to provide it.

  • by Alwin Barni ( 5107629 ) on Monday February 03, 2020 @10:50AM (#59684632)

    ... as it's very misleading. A technology savvy person understands its limitations, however an average one will not, and as these statistical and pattern sorting algorithms are branded AI people can put too much trust in them. The examples are numerous, from chat bots being easily fooled or thinking they like surfing to image recognition algorithms being fooled by some random stickers.

    Personally I think this technology is very useful and will revolutionize our life, but it has to be used wisely and more importantly people have to be aware of it's shortcomings as we humans have a tendency to anthropomorphize inanimate objects - it should be taught at schools, that it's not really intelligent, just a more sophisticated tool good at limited tasks, yet still having no knowledge or understanding of it.

As far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they are not certain, and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to reality. -- Albert Einstein

Working...