Search
Filter Results
- Resource Type
- Article1
- Book1
- Book Print1
- Result From
- Lane Catalog1
- PubMed1
-
Year
- Journal Title
- J Prosthet Dent1
Search Results
Sort by
- Bookby Peter Lee, Carey Goldberg, and Isaac Kohane, with Sébastien Bubeck.Summary: "Just months ago, millions of people were stunned by ChatGPT's amazing abilities, and its bizarre hallucinations. That was 2022. AI's next generation is coming fast : smarter, more accurate, with deeper technical knowledge. GPT-4 and its competitors are on the verge of transforming medicine. Whether you're a healthcare leader, provider, or a patient, you need to understand these technologies, stat. What can they do? What can't they do, yet? What shouldn't they ever do? To decide, experience the cutting edge for yourself. Join three insiders who've had months of early access to GPT-4 as they reveal its momentous potential ; to improve diagnoses, summarize patient visits, streamline processes, accelerate research, as well as its risks. You'll see real GPT-4 dialogues ; unrehearsed and unfiltered, brilliant and blundering alike, all annotated with invaluable context, candid commentary, real risk insights about potential downsides, and up-to-the-minute takeaways."-- taken from back cover.
Contents:
Foreword / by Sam Altman
First contact / by Peter Lee
Medicina ex machina / by Peter Lee
The big question : Does it “understand?” / by Peter Lee
Trust but verify / by Isaac "Zak" Kohane
The AI-augmented patient / by Carey Goldberg
So much more : Math, coding, and logic / by Peter Lee
The ultimate paperwork shredder / by Peter Lee
Smarter science / by Isaac "Zak" Kohane
Safety first / by Isaac "Zak" Kohane, Carey Goldberg, and Peter Lee
The big black bag / by Carey Goldberg and Isaac "Zak" Kohane
Epilogue / by Peter Lee. - ArticleKarlsson S, Hedegard B, Odont.J Prosthet Dent. 1979 Jan;41(1):21-5.A study was made on four patients to determine the reproducibility of the outer form of the buccal and lingual flanges of a complete lower denture as developed by functional movements of the surrounding tissues. 1. Two dentists participated in the study to find out the operator effect when making impressions for the functional form of the flanges. 2. Two tissue-conditioning impression materials were used to determine if the characteristics of the impression material had any effect on the final form. 3. The impression materials were applied to the denture flanges by two different methods. 4. The impressions were placed in a mitre box, stabilized with plaster, and sectioned in the molar, premolar, and incisor regions. This provided five cut surfaces for measuring. 5. Each section was measured at five to six representative distances. 6. The differences in the flange form measurement and the distances among the impressions made with the same technique and material were small, and the reproducibility can be considered clinically acceptable. 7. There were statistically significant differences in the flange form measurement distances among the different materials and method of application of the material.