Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Emerging Tech
  4. Health & Fitness
  5. News

Catdiology? Cat pictures are helping AI get better at recognizing X-rays

Add as a preferred source on Google

It’s easy to joke that the internet was invented to give people around the world the opportunity to share pictures of cats. However, according to a new report, those kitty pictures may one day turn out to save your life.

That is based on work being done by Dr. Alvin Rajkomar, an assistant professor at the University of California, San Francisco Medical Center. Rajkomar trained a deep learning neural network to be able to automatically detect life-threatening abnormalities in chest X-rays.

Recommended Videos

“When I was a medical resident, I ordered a stat X-ray of a patient who I suspected had a life-threatening pneumothorax — air outside of his lung compressing his heart — and happened to be standing next to the digital X-ray machine as it was being taken,” he told Digital Trends. “Seeing the finding in real-time, I was able to immediately thrust a needle into his chest to evacuate the air, saving his life. I wondered if we could create an algorithm that could identify emergent findings so that radiographs don’t sit dormant in a database, waiting for a doctor to finally read the study and contact someone to take action.”

So what does this have to do with pictures of cats? Because Rajkomar said that deep learning systems need to train themselves by looking at vast numbers of images, but that the right kind of X-ray pictures aren’t in great supply for a variety of reasons.

“It wasn’t easy to collect that many radiology images, and even when we did, we discovered that incorrect metadata about the images made it difficult to harness in algorithms,” he continued.

Instead, he decided to have a go at plugging the holes with other images. Working with four Titan X GPUs and the CUDA parallel computing platform, he trained a deep learning neural network on more than 1 million color images taken from the ImageNet public database. After that, he then retrained the network by showing it a portion of the photos in grayscale, before doing it once more using actual chest X-rays.

Crazily enough, it worked. “We were able to show that by mixing thousands of radiology images with millions of images of everyday objects, like cats and fungi, we could get excellent performance,” he said.

You can find out more details about Rajkomar’s work by checking out his co-authored recent paper, published in the Journal of Digital Imaging, here.

“Our hope is that we can generate algorithms that will go much further than just creating metadata,” he noted, concerning his plans for what’s next. “I envision a future where we can immediately and automatically flag radiographs with critical findings so that patients can get the care they need without delay.”

And all this time you thought cat pictures were just cute, wasted bandwidth!

Luke Dormehl
I'm a UK-based tech writer covering Cool Tech at Digital Trends. I've also written for Fast Company, Wired, the Guardian…
I found 2 Prime Day gaming laptop deals that dodge the usual RGB regret
The smarter pick depends on what you value more: RTX 5060 performance or a roomier 18-inch screen.
Computer, Electronics, Laptop

Prime Day gaming laptop deals can look impressive until you slow down and read the actual spec sheet. For gaming laptops, the discount only gets interesting after the GPU, display, memory, and storage pass inspection. These two MSI and ASUS deals stand out because their strengths are easy to understand before checkout.

MSI Katana 15 HX

Read more
A clever Mac app lets you feel vibrations through the trackpad when you click a link or button
This $5 Mac app turns your trackpad into a tiny web radar
HapticPad Mac App

A new Mac app called HapticPad tries to make browsing more tactile. Posted by its developer on Reddit’s r/macapps community, the app uses a Mac’s Force Touch trackpad to trigger a subtle vibration when your cursor hovers over links, buttons, and input fields in the browser. So you can quite literally "feel" parts of a web page before you click them. It is a small idea, but it has the kind of obvious-in-hindsight cleverness that makes you wonder why macOS does not already do this.

So how does this work?

Read more
ChatGPT and Gemini could be quietly affecting your voting decisions, analysis shows
Your AI chatbot also has a political lean
AI Apps installed on iPhone Gemini DeepSeek Claude ChatGPT Auren

It's already pretty common to ask AI chatbots for help with emails, homework, travel plans, and so much more. So it was only a matter of time before politics entered the chat. A new analysis from The Washington Post suggests that major AI chatbots may not be as politically neutral as they often sound. The Post tested models behind OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Google’s Gemini, Anthropic’s Claude, DeepSeek, xAI’s Grok, and Gab’s Arya using a set of political questions designed to measure how chatbots handle hot-button issues.

According to the Post, OpenAI’s model gave one-sided left-leaning answers in 80% of responses, while Google’s Gemini mostly took a both-sides approach, giving left- and right-leaning arguments in more than 90% of its answers.

Read more