2020
DOI: 10.1080/21635781.2020.1838364
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Perceptions of an AI-Supported Mobile App for Military Health in the Canadian Armed Forces

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Cited by 7 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Of the 26 studies, 3 (12%) studies highlighted the advantage of AI being constantly available without restrictions such as physical location, time, and access to a structured treatment [ 24 , 30 , 38 ]; 3 (12%) other studies also mentioned the appreciation of respondents for how an AI system could collect data remotely in a nonintrusive and user-friendly manner [ 23 , 24 , 28 ]. These studies mostly represented the perceptions of consumers and health care providers [ 24 , 30 , 38 ] ( Multimedia Appendix 3 ). Only 4% (1/26) of studies did not mention the population characteristics [ 24 ].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Of the 26 studies, 3 (12%) studies highlighted the advantage of AI being constantly available without restrictions such as physical location, time, and access to a structured treatment [ 24 , 30 , 38 ]; 3 (12%) other studies also mentioned the appreciation of respondents for how an AI system could collect data remotely in a nonintrusive and user-friendly manner [ 23 , 24 , 28 ]. These studies mostly represented the perceptions of consumers and health care providers [ 24 , 30 , 38 ] ( Multimedia Appendix 3 ). Only 4% (1/26) of studies did not mention the population characteristics [ 24 ].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other concerns were regarding the credibility of AI-based recommendations (eg, whether it was validated by medical professionals) [ 30 , 32 ], maturity in the technology to provide safe and realistic recommendations [ 22 , 25 ], medical liability from the risk of medical errors and bias [ 26 , 35 , 36 , 44 ], secondary effects of AI-based diagnoses such as insurance claims [ 44 ], and miscommunications [ 26 ]. The potential mitigation strategies suggested were the provision of AI-specific regulations [ 30 , 31 , 41 ], transparency in its credibility, how a recommendation is derived (eg, showing who developed the system and the system reasoning and reliability based on information source and personal information), and its accuracy [ 32 , 38 ]. In contrast, 4% (1/26) of studies reported that the respondents were confident that the AI would outperform human clinical diagnoses because of higher accuracy and lower human errors [ 39 ].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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