Sabtu, 06 Juli 2019

The surprising story behind the Apple Watch's ECG ability - Engadget

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Welcome to Hitting the Books. With less than one in five Americans reading just for fun these days, we've done the hard work for you by scouring the internet for the most interesting, thought provoking books on science and technology we can find and delivering an easily digestible nugget of their stories.

Deep Medicine: How Artificial Intelligence Can Make Healthcare Human Again
by Eric Topol


Book cover

The Apple Watch produced a seismic shift in the public's acceptance of biometric monitoring. Sure, we've had step counters, heart rate and sleep monitors for years, but the Apple Watch made it hip and cool to do so. In Deep Medicine, author Eric Topol examines how recent advances in AI and machine learning techniques can be leveraged to bring (at least the American) healthcare system out of its current dark age and create a more efficient, more effective system that better serves both its doctors and its patients. In the excerpt below, Topol examines the efforts by startup AliveCor and the Mayo Clinic to cram an ECG's functionality into a wristwatch-sized device without -- and this is the important part -- generating potentially lethal false positive results.

In February 2016, a small start-up company called AliveCor hired Frank Petterson and Simon Prakash, two Googlers with AI expertise, to transform their business of smartphone electrocardiograms (ECG). The company was struggling. They had developed the first smartphone app capable of single-lead ECG, and, by 2015, they were even able to display the ECG on an Apple Watch. The app had a "wow" factor but otherwise seemed to be of little practical value. The company faced an existential threat, despite extensive venture capital investment from Khosla Ventures and others.

But Petterson, Prakash, and their team of only three other AI talents had an ambitious, twofold mission. One objective was to develop an algorithm that would passively detect a heart-rhythm disorder, the other to determine the level of potassium in the blood, simply from the ECG captured by the watch. It wasn't a crazy idea, given whom AliveCor had just hired. Petterson, AliveCor's VP of engineering, is tall, blue-eyed, dark-haired with frontal balding, and, like most engineers, a bit introverted. At Google, he headed up YouTube Live, Gaming, and led engineering for Hangouts. He previously had won an Academy Award and nine feature film credits for his design and development software for movies including the

Transformers, Star Trek, the Harry Potter series, and Avatar. Prakash, the VP of products and design, is not as tall as Petterson, without an Academy Award, but is especially handsome, dark-haired, and brown-eyed, looking like he's right out of a Hollywood movie set. His youthful appearance doesn't jibe with a track record of twenty years of experience in product development, which included leading the Google Glass design project. He also worked at Apple for nine years, directly involved in the development of the first iPhone and iPad. That background might, in retrospect, be considered ironic.

Meanwhile, a team of more than twenty engineers and computer scientists at Apple, located just six miles away, had its sights set on diagnosing atrial fibrillation via their watch. They benefited from Apple's seemingly unlimited resources and strong corporate support: the company's chief operating officer, Jeff Williams, responsible for the Apple Watch development and release, had articulated a strong vision for it as an essential medical device of the future. There wasn't any question about the importance and priority of this project when I had the chance to visit Apple as an advisor and review its progress. It seemed their goal would be a shoo-in.

The Apple goal certainly seemed more attainable on the face of it. Determining the level of potassium in the blood might not be something you would expect to be possible with a watch. But the era of deep learning, as we'll review, has upended a lot of expectations.

The idea to do this didn't come from AliveCor. At the Mayo Clinic, Paul Friedman and his colleagues were busy studying details of a part of an ECG known as the T wave and how it correlated with blood levels of potassium. In medicine, we've known for decades that tall T waves could signify high potassium levels and that a potassium level over 5.0 mEq/L is dangerous. People with kidney disease are at risk for developing these levels of potassium. The higher the blood level over 5, the greater the risk of sudden death due to heart arrhythmias, especially for patients with advanced kidney disease or those who undergo hemodialysis. Friedman's findings were based on correlating the ECG and potassium levels in just twelve patients before, during, and after dialysis. They published their findings in an obscure heart electrophysiology journal in 2015; the paper's subtitle was "Proof of Concept for a Novel 'Blood-Less' Blood Test." They reported that with potassium level changes even in the normal range (3.5–5.0), differences as low as 0.2 mEq/L could be machine detected by the ECG, but not by a human-eye review of the tracing.

Friedman and his team were keen to pursue this idea with the new way of obtaining ECGs, via smartphones or smartwatches, and incorporate AI tools. Instead of approaching big companies such as Medtronic or Apple, they chose to approach AliveCor's CEO, Vic Gundotra, in February 2016, just before Petterson and Prakash had joined. Gundotra is another former Google engineer who told me that he had joined AliveCor because he believed there were many signals waiting to be found in an ECG. Eventually, by year's end, the Mayo Clinic and AliveCor ratified an agreement to move forward together.

The Mayo Clinic has a remarkable number of patients, which gave AliveCor a training set of more than 1.3 million twelve-lead ECGs gathered from more than twenty years of patients, along with corresponding blood potassium levels obtained within one to three hours of the ECG, for developing an algorithm. But when these data were analyzed it was a bust.

Here, the "ground truths," the actual potassium (K+) blood levels, are plotted on the x-axis, while the algorithm-predicted values are on the y-axis. They're all over the place. A true K+ value of nearly 7 was predicted to be 4.5; the error rate was unacceptable. The AliveCor team, having made multiple trips to Rochester, Minnesota, to work with the big dataset, many in the dead of winter, sank into what Gundotra called "three months in the valley of despair" as they tried to figure out what had gone wrong.

Petterson and Prakash and their team dissected the data. At first, they thought it was likely a postmortem autopsy, until they had an idea for a potential comeback. The Mayo Clinic had filtered its massive ECG database to provide only outpatients, which skewed the sample to healthier individuals and, as you would expect for people walking around, a fairly limited number with high potassium levels. What if all the patients who were hospitalized at the time were analyzed? Not only would this yield a higher proportion of people with high potassium levels, but the blood levels would have been taken closer to the time of the ECG.

They also thought that maybe all the key information was not in the T wave, as Friedman's team had thought. So why not analyze the whole ECG signal and override the human assumption that all the useful information would have been encoded in the T wave? They asked the Mayo Clinic to come up with a better, broader dataset to work with. And Mayo came through. Now their algorithm could be tested with 2.8 million ECGs incorporating the whole ECG pattern instead of just the T wave with 4.28 million potassium levels. And what happened?

asdf

The receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves of true versus false positive rates, with examples of worthless, good, and excellent plotted. Source: Wikipedia (2018)

Eureka! The error rate dropped to 1 percent, and the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve, a measure of predictive accuracy where 1.0 is perfect, rose from 0.63 at the time of the scatterplot to 0.86. We'll be referring to ROC curves a lot throughout the book, since they are considered one of the best ways to show (underscoring one, and to point out the method has been sharply criticized and there are ongoing efforts to develop better performance metrics) and quantify accuracy—plotting the true positive rate against the false positive rate (Figure 4.2). The value denoting accuracy is the area under the curve, whereby 1.0 is perfect, 0.50 is the diagonal line "worthless," the equivalent of a coin toss. The area of 0.63 that AliveCor initially obtained is deemed poor. Generally, 0.80–.90 is considered good, 0.70–.80 fair. They further prospectively validated their algorithm in forty dialysis patients with simultaneous ECGs and potassium levels. AliveCor now had the data and algorithm to present to the FDA to get clearance to market the algorithm for detecting high potassium levels on a smartwatch.

There were vital lessons in AliveCor's experience for anyone seeking to apply AI to medicine. When I asked Petterson what he learned, he said, "Don't filter the data too early. . . . I was at Google. Vic was at Google. Simon was at Google. We have learned this lesson before, but sometimes you have to learn the lesson multiple times. Machine learning tends to work best if you give it enough data and the rawest data you can. Because if you have enough of it, then it should be able to filter out the noise by itself."

"In medicine, you tend not to have enough. This is not search queries. There's not a billion of them coming in every minute. . . . When you have a dataset of a million entries in medicine, it's a giant dataset. And so, the order or magnitude that Google works at is not just a thousand times bigger but a million times bigger." Filtering the data so that a person can manually annotate it is a terrible idea. Most AI applications in medicine don't recognize that, but, he told me, "That's kind of a seismic shift that I think needs to come to this industry."

Excerpted from Deep Medicine: How Artificial Intelligence Can Make Healthcare Human Again. Copyright © 2019 by Eric Topol. Available from Basic Books.

In this article: apple, column, gadgetry, gadgets, google, tomorrow
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https://www.engadget.com/2019/07/06/the-surprising-story-behind-apple-watchs-ecg-function/

2019-07-06 16:36:01Z
CAIiEGI6sMyPPtkO_aZnxwW-4YcqFwgEKg8IACoHCAowwOjjAjDp3xsw9bAl

Hot rumor has Sony prepping a foldable phone with a retractable rolling display - Phone Arena

While other phone manufacturers developing their own foldables are watching Samsung and Huawei intently, a tweet from a tipster (via MSPoweruser) with the handle of Max J. says that Sony is also working on its own foldable device. According to the tweet, prototypes being built by the company are equipped with an LG Display, a camera with a 10x Zoom capability, and a 3220mAh battery. The latter seems a bit on the light side, but again, Sony is working on prototypes at the moment. For example, the mid-range Snapdragon 7250 SoC is being used on the test models although the foldable is expected to sport the Snapdragon 855 Mobile Platform and the Snapdragon X50 5G modem by the time it is ready to go on sale to consumers. Yes, Sony's foldable will support 5G connectivity.

Sony's foldable will apparently have a retractable roll-out display

Unlike the Galaxy Fold or Mate X, the tweet notes that Sony's foldable will use a Nautilus design. This means that it could use the retractable roll-out form factor similar to what Samsung included in illustrations for a patent it recently received. And back in 2016, Samsung also put a prototype rollable OLED screen on display. The patent mentioned using rails to help a user expand a smartphone display by pulling on both sides of the device. This would turn a smartphone into a tablet. Assuming that there are no setbacks, the tipster notes that Sony's foldable could launch in late December 2019, or early next year.
An image from Samsung's patent for a foldable phone using a rollable display

An image from Samsung's patent for a foldable phone using a rollable display

Any type of retractable rollable phone would have to deal with debris and dust. As Samsung found out with the Galaxy Fold, all it takes is a little piece of foreign material to get sucked in through an opening and there could be problems. One influencer found a bulge on the internal screen of his Galaxy Fold review unit after debris was sucked into the device through an opening in the hinge. Samsung has reportedly reduced the size of that gap to prevent it from happening again.

To show that it is starting over from scratch, Sony named its flagship model this year the Xperia 1 and is using a more cinematic friendly 21:9 aspect ratio. That makes the screen thin and wide and those viewing streamed content in landscape mode will notice a superior viewing experience. The 6.5-inch AMOLED display carries a resolution of 1644 x 3840 pixels and provides a whopping 643 ppi pixel density.

Producing a foldable device now would seem strange for a company that is bleeding red ink from its mobile division, but this is a business that Sony really wants to succeed in. As a result, if this leak is legit, the company is pulling out all of the stops to make a mark in the industry.

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2019-07-06 15:34:45Z
CBMiT2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnBob25lYXJlbmEuY29tL25ld3MvU29ueS10aXBwZWQtdG8tZW50ZXItdGhlLWZvbGRhYmxlLXdhcnNfaWQxMTczMTfSAQA

Nintendo Wants The Switch Business To Continue For As Long As Possible - Nintendo Life

Nintendo Switch

During Nintendo's recent shareholder's Q&A, president Shuntaro Furukawa explained how the company wanted to maintain Switch sales over a prolonged period of time, when asked about the possibility of the system dropping off - in terms of sales - when it reached its peak, much like the Wii did.

We want the Nintendo Switch business to continue for as long as possible, and to this end, we will not only release a continuous stream of exciting titles but also work to enhance our digital content and network services like Nintendo Switch Online. By continuing to challenge the boundaries of what can be done with Nintendo Switch in different ways than the Wii, we hope to maintain sales over a long lifecycle.

Furukawa reinforced this, by touching on the current hardware sales and continued software sales of previously released titles:

Nintendo Switch sales trended favorably in all regions during the previous term (the fiscal year ended March 2019), with hardware sales of 16.95 million units and software sales of 118.55 million copies, exceeding the results posted for the year ended March 2018. Last year saw the release of many new titles that proved to be big hits, including Super Mario Party in October, Pokémon: Let's Go, Pikachu!/Let's Go, Eevee! in November, and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate in December. Combined with the continued sales of previously released titles like Mario Kart 8 Deluxe and Super Mario Odyssey, these titles all contributed to steady hardware sales. In fact, the pace at which the Nintendo Switch installed base is growing is accelerating, and the business is proceeding soundly. With the planned software lineup we recently announced at E3 in the US, I believe the situation supports our expectation of further growth.

Do you think the Switch is here for the long haul? Tell us down in the comments.

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http://www.nintendolife.com/news/2019/07/nintendo_wants_the_switch_business_to_continue_for_as_long_as_possible

2019-07-06 12:45:00Z
52780326925131

Jumat, 05 Juli 2019

Konami says Sony made the call to drop 'PES 2019' from PS Plus freebies - Engadget

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Sony raised some eyebrows when it said Pro Evolution Soccer 2019 would no longer be a free game for PS Plus subscribers in July, with Detroit: Become Human Digital Deluxe Edition (which includes Heavy Rain) taking its place. But if you're wondering why the change occurred, statements from Sony and PES publisher Konami didn't shed too much light on the matter, beyond revealing who made the call.

"This decision was made by Sony and so please make an inquiry to Sony," Konami bluntly told GameSpot. When Sony announced the swap, the European brand manager for PES told the same publication that Konami was caught by surprise. "I cannot really tell you what happened because I just found out today, in the morning when I opened my laptop. I can't really explain," Lennart Bobzien said.

Sony didn't offer any deeper explanation on the call in its own statement. "We have decided to make a change to the PS Plus games lineup this month, and will be offering Detroit: Become Human Digital Deluxe Edition instead of PES 2019," it said. "This was a decision we decided to make as a company, and we apologize for any inconvenience."

It's possible some kind of late contractual issue might have led to the switch, as Eurogamer suggests, though Sony might simply have been trying to placate fans who weren't pleased about the inclusion of PES. In any case, Sony seems to have annoyed Konami as well as players who were looking forward to picking up the soccer sim as part of their PS Plus plans. Others had also bought Detroit: Become Human at a discount in last month's Days of Play sale, so Sony might have ticked off those gamers with the swap too.

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https://www.engadget.com/2019/07/05/konami-sony-pes-2019-ps-plus-detroit-become-human/

2019-07-05 17:04:42Z
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Sony Pulled PES 2019 From PS Plus, Not Konami - IGN

It was a decision "made as a company".

It was Sony’s decision to pull Pro Evolution Soccer 2019 from July’s PS Plus lineup, says Konami.

In a statement to Eurogamer, Konami said: “This decision was made by SIE and so please make an inquiry to SIE."

Eurogamer posed the same question to Sony, who offered no details as to why they changed PES 2019 for Detroit: Become Human, but did note that “This was a decision we decided to make as a company, and we apologise for any inconvenience.”

Exit Theatre Mode

A proposed theory is that the change may be related to Sony’s marketing deal with PES rival FIFA, with PS4 branding now being applied to the end of FIFA 20 trailers. But as it stands, the reasoning behind Sony’s decision remains a mystery.

For more on Pro Evolution Soccer, check out our PES 2020 gameplay and features walkthrough from E3 2019. If it’s Quantic Dream’s story of sad robots that has you interested, then take a look at our Detroit: Become Human review.

Matt Purslow is IGN's UK News and Entertainment Writer. You can follow him on Twitter

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2019-07-05 16:17:18Z
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Apple may have found a fix for the MacBook keyboards everyone hates - CNN

MacBooks since 2015 have featured a "butterfly" keyboard mechanism that saves about a millimeter of space from older designs — a big deal when Apple's thinnest laptops are just 13 millimeters tall. But the butterfly keys had some critical flaws: They were easily broken. The keys traveled less than traditional keyboards, so typers weren't confident the computer registered each keystroke. And dust and grit could get underneath the keys, rendering them useless.
Enough Apple customers complained about the mushy, sticky keys that the company redesigned them — twice. In the latest iteration, released on the MacBook Air last year, Apple (AAPL) included silicone film around each key to keep out dirt. But it didn't work: Customers still complained, and Apple publicly apologized in March, acknowledging that MacBook owners were still having trouble with their keyboards.
The 2017 Apple MacBook featured butterfly keys.
Apparently Apple is ready for a change, too. The company is reportedly planning on introducing a new MacBook Air later this year with a traditional "scissor" keyboard, according to prominent Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo of TF International Securities, who has a strong track record of predicting Apple innovations. He said Apple will put the new keyboards in MacBook Pro computers when the company refreshes that lineup next year. 9to5Mac first reported the coming change.
Most keyboards use a hinge that looks like a scissor. When you press down, the scissor opens up. When you release the key, springs help the scissor "close." The scissor-style keys provide a decent amount of travel when you press a key, giving you the confidence the computer registered your keystroke. And they've proven very durable.
The disadvantage is scissor keys have relatively thick hinges. As gadgets get thinner, tech companies are looking for ways to save space. But Apple's space-saving solution didn't cut it, so it went back to the drawing board.
The "scissor" style keys on the left and the bemoaned "butterfly" style on the right.
In typical Apple fashion, the company isn't simply reverting to its old-style keys. Instead, it's inventing something new: keys made out of glass fiber to make them extra durable. The keys will feature the same travel distance as previous scissor-style keys, and they'll be cheaper to manufacture than the butterfly keys, according to Kuo.

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https://www.cnn.com/2019/07/05/tech/macbook-keyboard/index.html

2019-07-05 12:55:00Z
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Samsung sued for misleading water-resistance ads in Australia - Android Police

Samsung began calling its flagship Galaxy phones "water-proof" or "water-resistant" with the Galaxy S7 series, which received an IP68 rating, meaning it should be okay to submerge it into up to five feet deep water for a maximum of 30 minutes. That hasn't stopped the company from aggressively marketing its phones as great devices to use at the pool or on the beach ever since, without actually covering any water damage under warranty. The Australian Competition & Consumer Commission (ACCC) disapproves of these "misleading advertisements" and is taking the Korean company to court over them.

While it's true that you don't need to worry about breaking recent Galaxy phones should you drop them in a puddle or the toilet, the company's ads went far beyond shallow, fresh-water accidents. The ACCC has collected some of these, showing people using their phones on the bottom of a pool (much deeper than the recommended 5 feet maximum), while surfing in the ocean, and while sleeping on an air mattress in the water. Some of these advertisements include disclaimers that it's only water resistant according to the IP68 spec, but there are a ton of other examples with no warning at all.

"Salty Summers." Yeah. Image: ACCC.

“The ACCC alleges Samsung’s advertisements falsely and misleadingly represented Galaxy phones would be suitable for use in, or for exposure to, all types of water, including in ocean water and swimming pools, and would not be affected by such exposure to water for the life of the phone, when this was not the case,” ACCC Chair Rod Sims said.

Specifically, the consumer protection organization takes issue with Samsung not testing its devices for exposure to non-fresh water and denying related warranty claims, with the manufacturer saying that other liquids could damage phones. Contrary to its advertisements, the company states on its Australian website that "beach or pool use" is "not advised" for the Galaxy S10 range.

This phone is most likely water-damaged by now. Image: ACCC.

Devices subject to the ACCC's lawsuit are the S10e, S10, S10 Plus, S9, S9 Plus, S8, S8 Plus, S7, S7 Edge, Note 9, Note 8, Note 7, A8, A7, and A5. All in all, I wish more consumer protection agencies would take this step. People who are not as interested in tech as we are could easily be deceived by these misleading ads, even if they have a warning in the fine print. But to be honest, who reads an ad's fine print?

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https://www.androidpolice.com/2019/07/05/samsung-sued-for-misleading-water-resistance-ads-in-australia/

2019-07-05 14:33:00Z
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