tmhrtly 1 hour ago

> You want as much data as you can get about your health as quickly and as cheaply as possible. In other words, you want a technology optimized for getting as many “megabytes per second per dollar” of information about your body.

This is so far from my vision of what I want from healthcare. I want a healthcare system that is optimised around A) proactively keeping me healthy, and B) reactively helping get back to healthy when I am not. I do not care about the amount of megabytes of data I have about my body.

  • sobiolite 1 hour ago

    Aren't they serving the same thing? Proactively and reactively keeping you healthy requires understanding your body, both the baseline of how it functions when you're healthy, and how it functions when you're not.

    Right now we're often in a situation where the only data you have is expensive tests ran when you're sick enough to justify them, when it may already be too late.

    • jappgar 1 hour ago

      Today only I'll sell you 6GB of data for 6000USD its a steal. Buy now.

    • jermaustin1 24 minutes ago

      > Right now we're often in a situation where the only data you have is expensive tests ran when you're sick enough to justify them, when it may already be too late.

      In the USA, an annual physical includes a good deal of blood tests covered 100% by ACA-compliant insurance plans. The problem is most people don't do it.

      As a person with a few chronic conditions, I'm getting bloodwork done every few months at the cost to me of $5/mo (heavily discounted by my insurer's portion of the payment).

      What I have found is people who complain about the cost of the tests either don't have insurance (with many excuses for that: I'm too healthy, I can't afford it, doctors are for sick people, etc.) or don't go to the doctor, even though they pay a healthy percentage of their income for the privilege.

      Health Insurance is too expensive to not use it. Get every bit of free benefit out of your insurer as you can (gym memberships, annual physicals, drug/alcohol counselling, lots of screenings and vaccines, etc), and if they are going to charge you and/or your employer to the tune of $2000/mo, fucking use it!

    • logravia 23 minutes ago

      False positives are the primary issue. False positives lead to stress, invasive diagnostic procedures and wasted medical resources. Look into the debate about what is the appropriate age for mammographies and how Apple Watches have resulted in overdiagnosis of heart conditions.

      For data to be useful we need rigorous medical science. We have shitton of worthless medical data with little science behind it.

  • rvrs 1 hour ago

    >A) proactively keeping me healthy,

    This will never happen and arguably should not be the *medical* system's problem. It is just not feasible

    • michaelscott 24 minutes ago

      This happens in a number of medical systems of countries across the world and is perfectly feasible, usually through premium subsidies for stuff like planned check ups, buying certain types of food and even installing equipment to monitor your driving behaviour. The thinking is that encouraging customers to be healthy reduces premium claims in the future

    • hombre_fatal 14 minutes ago

      To get a blood panel (cholesterol, liver enzymes, hemoglobin A1c, etc) I need to see my PCP who will order those tests from a testing facility. Else my insurance won’t cover it. And I have to schedule a whole visit and pay the copay for the privilege.

      Being able to get free tests every 6 months directly from the facility would be an example of a feasibly proactive measure the system could do for us.

      Maybe you’re only thinking of a system that will somehow get people to eat healthy and exercise?

    • AbsurdCensor 9 minutes ago

      I thought this was the main goal of things like preventative medicine. Earlier testing, and more frequent testing allows you to catch things while you still 'feel healthy' so they do not become a chronic problem in the long term. Simple things like tracking weight, blood pressure over time. Add in things like colonoscopies, breast exams, I would say most medicine should be preventative, ie keeping you healthy, rather than reactive, of just trying to try you when you are ill.

  • jon-wood 1 hour ago

    Yeah, I want something which is optimized for getting me actionable and more importantly accurate information, preferably without flagging every outlier as the harbinger of a disease that'll kill me within the next six weeks.

    • noduerme 44 minutes ago

      Okay, you're worried about too much data and false positives, but that's a problem you can get around by smoking a pack a day and not going to the doctor. The vast majority of people on the planet have exactly zero hard data on their ailments, and even if they spend their life savings trying to get a clear picture they may never have one.

      Could this much potentially frivolous data unlocked for semi-literate worriers and conspiracy theorists lead to whole subreddits full of people freaking out about questionably meaningful physiological aberrations? Definitely. But that's just a variation of "a little knowledge is a dangerous thing," and I believe we crossed that threshold as a society some time ago. So bring on the terabytes and let's see what we can do with them.

  • mr_mitm 52 minutes ago

    After an injury, you may want to get an MRI to help you recover and determine best course of action. If an MRI cost a million dollars, or a single MRI scan took an entire day (which means every machine within driving distance will be booked years in advance or will be reserved for only the most critical cases), you won't benefit from an MRI image.

    "Megabytes per second per dollar" may not be the optimal way to phrase this, but cost and efficiency are a real concern.

    • nyeah 25 minutes ago

      Yes, cost and efficiency are a real concern. But ... we already know that. In the US we keep jobs we hate over that. We have a perennial national flame war about that.

      What's new here is selling me megabytes (of whatever) per dollar, and some startup storing scans of my body (liable to go effectively into the public domain when the firm starts to go under). No thanks.

  • santiagobasulto 42 minutes ago

    The fact that you're not naming any cost related variable reflects your own current personal situation (privileged, I'd assume). But this is NOT the situation for most people in the world.

    Don't get me wrong, I'm also privileged. I can pay for pretty much any type of medical intervention that I'd need. So my variables are usually "comfort", "speed", "convenience", etc. But I know that this is NOT the most common scenario for everybody.

    • monkeydust 28 minutes ago

      If you ask people to rank say 5 things from top to bottom where the first thing at the top is what they are least cost conscious about and the one at bottom is what they are most - I would bet health would at the top slot for most of us. So relatively we would spend (whatever we have) on our health versus other things if we had conviction on the outcome.

      • jordanb 7 minutes ago

        "I want to be able to walk without pain but if it's gonna be expensive forget it!"

  • aimanbenbaha 40 minutes ago

    Everything you want in your desired healthcare system can be stored as data.

  • moduspol 20 minutes ago

    The way we figure out how to catch issues before you notice them (i.e. proactively keeping you healthy) and figure out the best ways to fix them (i.e. reactively helping you get back to healthy) is by having more data from more people in more situations, so we can make those determinations.

    I understand some of the current fatigue around biohacking and chasing perhaps-irrelevant metrics, but takes like this surprise me. Do you think people said the same kind of things before the blood pressure cuff became widely available? Or heart rate monitors? Or bathroom scales?

    Do we just want to walk around with blinders on because we think we feel OK right now? More data is the only way to get better at this stuff.

randusername 32 minutes ago

> Beyond that, regulation is the next limit. Normally, for every diagnostic medical capability you need FDA approval. We’re starting by just giving you detailed body composition maps — and we’ll be submitting regular test results to the FDA for increased capabilities.

This is just not how the FDA works. At all. You can't just email them slideware and marketing materials to keep them in the loop.

You have to hire an army of expensive compliance people (cheap ones aren't nimble enough for startups), develop the whole thing start to finish under strict design controls, and usually throw a lot of time and capital into convincing regulators your very innovative and disruptive new R&D endeavor is actually derivative enough to draft behind some existing medical device.

  • spongebobstoes 26 minutes ago

    do they need FDA approval to have a good impact? it doesn't need to be a licensed medical device for me to interpret the data, and then verbally tell my doctor what's wrong

    this is similar to how people get a lot of medical value out of chatgpt today

    • Cthulhu_ 22 minutes ago

      It needs approval from someone to ensure it's safe first and foremost - health & safety inspections, hygiene, FCC approval, etc.

      And FDA approval (I presume) if they want to give formal diagnoses, but I believe that if they don't get that it'll fall under the "alternative medicine" umbrella, which is very broad. But they can do whatever under that umbrella as long as it's safe.

    • StarlaAtNight 20 minutes ago

      I wonder how doctors feel about people consulting ChatGPT. I know a doctor who can't stand people getting medical advice from quacks on TikTok, but that's probably a different problem/pattern

    • jcmontx 5 minutes ago

      Let's say you do a diagnostic based on the results of this machine. Later, patient suits and you have to answer for your diagnostic. If the only evidence for your diagnostic is coming from a non-FDA approved machine, you're liable.

  • renegade-otter 6 minutes ago

    That may be true, but the FDA is no longer run by fiduciaries of the United States.

  • nDRDY 3 minutes ago

    For reference, OP is talking about the 510(k) process. One of the issues with that process is that an approved medical device may end up with a whole tree of "derivative" devices approved through the 510(k) process. If that original device is then found to have problems and has its approval removed, those derivative devices do not also become unapproved.

GTP 1 hour ago

I find the technology side intriguing and worth a deeper dive.

But I'm not convinced about their view of having people casually going to a spa every week and getting a full body scan. AFAIK, some doctors tend to avoid full-body scans. The reason is that each body is different and has its own quirks. If you do a scan for no reason other than "I can do it fast", chances are that the scan will show something unusual. But, at the same time, it is likely that it isn't a problem. And now, you will be stressed about the chance of having some health condition and spend time and money digging into a rabbit hole of what the issue could be, only to find out it was nothing.

They also don't say anything about the price of such a machine. If they really envision a future where everyone can easily get a scan, this is a crucial factor.

  • MPSimmons 1 hour ago

    I learned this from watching House. I am certain that it's true, but I also kind of wonder how much backpressure there is against this kind of thing because the scanners are also insanely expensive to run per minute.

    • fastasucan 1 hour ago

      This backpressure is even with cheaper devices such as x-rays etc.

      • jon-wood 58 minutes ago

        The backpressure on x-rays is because dosing yourself with radiation on a regular basis is a really great way to generate health problems in the course of trying to find some. There's a reason x-ray operators and anyone in the room with the patient get given lead lined aprons to wear while the machine is active.

  • aeonik 1 hour ago

    Why can't we do full body scans, learn about these "quirks", and document them in the wider science literature?

    I understand there are many benign tumors that doctors prefer to ignore in people, but eventually when scanning becomes portable and safe enough having regular access to scans could really help a lot of conditions.

    • GTP 1 hour ago

      I think we may be looking at a very large, if not potentially infinite, set of quirks. And there's the risk of worrying people for nothing. So, if this is the plan, at the very least, it should take the form of a large medical study and not a shiny machine for fancy spas.

      • dd36 1 hour ago

        Isn’t that a similar argument against AI?

        • GTP 59 minutes ago

          Sorry, I don't get your point.

    • fastasucan 1 hour ago

      Because if a "condition" doesn't impact you, will it help to be aware of it? Over treatment can be a real problem. You dont want to take medisine you dont need, or spend much time in a hospital if there is no net positive outcome.

      • x187463 1 hour ago

        > Because if a "condition" doesn't impact you, will it help to be aware of it?

        Fast and cheap full body scans could provide the data necessary to tune out the noise.

      • aeonik 1 hour ago

        For me?

        If I could have daily full 3d body scans, and time lapse healing, track injury progress, visualize and correlate food and exercise.

        And all I have to do is chill out about known benign cysts and tumors.

        Yes I think it will help. I would take that trade off.

        I already can feel a few cysts that have been with me for a long time, docs said I was fine, so I've already been through the stressful initiation of benign lumps.

        • jappgar 58 minutes ago

          And for what? Is it just morbid curiosity or is there something you plan to do with that information.

      • GTP 1 hour ago

        Just to add to this. My heart pumps blood in a known but different way than normal. I know because, to practice sports in my home country, it is required to undergo a specific checkup that includes an ECG. However, despite doing that visit many times, only two doctors ever mentioned this condition. The reason is that it causes no issue at all, so they just don't want to worry people for nothing by telling them their heart is pumping in a different way than most other people.

      • timjver 56 minutes ago

        > Over treatment can be a real problem.

        Indeed, but having more data might be able to solve that? The whole problem seems to be that benign conditions sometimes look scary because we're currently not able to predict well enough whether it's something that will eventually cause problems.

    • muggesmuds 54 minutes ago

      Because a lot of things showing up in scans you wont know what is until you cut them out or do a biopsy. And even then you might never know if that thing would have progressed to become a problem. Scanning more will not solve that.

    • dtj1123 24 minutes ago

      Realistically this data is going to be used to train a closed source model, not to contribute to the scientific literature.

    • mapkkk 18 minutes ago

      We can and do full body scans. Typically in the context of research, or for focus/metastasis search in current clinical settings.

      The problem is that, in clinical practice, with every imaging technology there are trade-offs. Just because we see something out of the ordinary in a scan doesn't immediately tell us whether it's pathology, pathology worth investigating/treating, or if it's just a normal physiological variation.

      Which means that, when "something" is seen on a scan, we must do further testing, either increasingly invasive, or increasingly time consuming and expensive.

      I agree with the sentiment that if we had a way cheap, fast, and harmless way to scan an entire body we would unlock many new research areas and that it would further our medical understanding, and eventually ripen for clinical use.

      However currently, I do not see any benefit in giving access to the population to such a technology, because we neither have the resources to chase down every single region of interest in a scan, nor do we have efficacious treatments for everything we might come across on a scan. Which is why we've settled on scanning things if there are other signs of disease, and only treating something when it significantly impairs life quality and/or expectancy.

      Should such a quick and easy scan be in every hospital and research center? Yes. Should it be a spa for people to go to whenever they feel like? No.

      • spongebobstoes 4 minutes ago

        "the people can't be trusted with knowledge" is a bad argument

        we don't need to do much differently to take advantage of this data anyway. doctors already ask patients what changed recently

        collect data passively. when a medical condition arises, you have a data source to correlate against the onset of the condition

        currently we have almost no data, so doctors need to run multiple tests to identify possible causes

  • mlrtime 1 hour ago

    Agreed, If you look for issues, you'll find them.

    Anecdote: My wife had a high risk pregnancy. They did more than the usual scans and tests, and at one point we were told to go immediately to the NICU, spent 48h there , more tests. None of the tests really showed anything other than she was different than the normal pregnancy (I won't get into the specifics).

    In the end, we have a healthy child but it was a lot of pain just going through test after test just because things were out of bands (my words).

    • telesilla 1 hour ago

      I'm grateful that modern science can monitor and predict such issues, even if in the end there's no problem. The alternative, as we know for thousands of years without modern health care, is far worse for women giving birth.

      I'm in full favour of learning better and better tests. Over time we'll have enough data to know what's urgent and what's preventative. Losing friends and family to avoidable health issues is too heartbreaking.

      • GTP 1 hour ago

        Sure, but in this case, there was a good reason for the additional tests: a high-risk pregnancy. And still, the outcome was stress for nothing. Now, imagine thousands of perfectly healthy people doing full-body scans every week just because they can. This actually carries the risk of jamming real health care, because those perfectly healthy people will undergo additional clinical tests for nothing.

        • telesilla 36 minutes ago

          Imagine all the data that gets us towards those scans actually being meaningful. Don't treat them like scans to find problems but scans to learn from, collectively.

  • thebruce87m 1 hour ago

    > chances are that the scan will show something unusual

    Something unusual in a single one-off scan vs something unusual and changing over the course of multiple scans give two different views.

    • Saline9515 7 minutes ago

      The main potential of this technology is that it's easy and fast, unlike classic MRIs. So someone could do a scan a month without a problem.

  • zipy124 1 hour ago

    MedLifeCrisis the youtube channel has a great video [1] on why you shouldn't full body scan. He's a consultant (highest level of doctor) in the NHS in England (and has done a PhD and research as is common in the UK medical system).

    [1]: https://youtu.be/BJ9soFmzYO8

  • bondarchuk 1 hour ago

    I know you are right but it just sounds so dumb. In theory it should be possible to do a scan and then realize most things you find are likely not a problem and don't worry about them.

  • andrerath 1 hour ago

    SOTA ultrasound devices are still very expensive, with e.g. a custom 3D probe with a few hundred piezo elements costing well over 10k. IF they want to use MEMS probe instead of piezo (which is implied by them saying that they will use a chirp), that's going to be even more expensive, considering the lack of manufacturing know-how. When sufficiently scaled, I wouldn't say it is an exorbitant price for large research hospitals, but I am a little skeptical of rolling these out as a health checkup "spa" service outside of areas with extreme wealth concentration (e.g., Silicon Valley? Sure. London? Yeah; Minneapolis? not so sure.)

  • evrydayhustling 1 hour ago

    "We shouldn't collect information because we don't know how to fit it into our care playbook" might be rational for a single patient, but it's a policy that will lock you into your current playbook.

    Our medical industry is set up to only evolve via highly centralized research that fully situates a diagnostic within a particular treatment path. This approach makes it more and more expensive to improve care for narrower and narrower populations - driving medicine towards being a luxury good.

    I'd like to see midjourney say more about price, but I love the idea of starting some new diagnostic pathways with different principles. There are probably all sorts of low hanging fruit to be found about new treatment strategies... It just takes some faith that nature hasn't hidden all of her secrets in the one place we already know how to look.

    • GTP 55 minutes ago

      I understand your point, and I might even agree to some extent. However, the issue is that this isn't presented as an opportunity to do research, but as commoditizing a clinical test that, when it isn't done for medical reasons (i.e., investigating some existing symptoms), can lead to a lot of false positives.

  • khafra 58 minutes ago

    If this becomes cheap and widespread, there'll likely be an initial iatrogenic spike, of course--but how could you think that having an enormous amount of precise, quantifiable data about a lot of bodies, and the ability to analyze all that data, is a bad thing in the long run?

  • jappgar 55 minutes ago

    Another reason is that we don't actually know what negative effects regular "scans" might have.

    Actually in some cases we do know. Regular xrays are harmful, for example.

  • igortg 55 minutes ago

    I thought the same. There are papers analyzing data about that.

    https://www.wiserhealthcare.org.au/too-much-of-a-good-thing-...

    > As well as being unlikely to be beneficial, full body general health checks in asymptomatic people can potentially be harmful. The main harms are overdiagnosis, detrimental psychological effects, negative effects on health behaviours (for example, failure to quit smoking due to reassurance of good health), complications related to follow-up tests, and unnecessary treatments.

    • spongebobstoes 10 minutes ago

      those scans are one-off events, these scans are regular

      the signal is improved by focusing on differences over time, instead of looking for insight from a single snapshot

      in a production system, I look at the change log around incident start as one high signal way to diagnose the problem

      I want the same ability with my own body. new pain? look for recent scan deltas, in conjunction with modern medical intuition

  • TuringNYC 49 minutes ago

    >> But I'm not convinced about their view of having people casually going to a spa every week and getting a full body scan.

    People are already doing this monthly with DEXA scans!

  • dperfect 10 minutes ago

    Over-diagnosis can be a problem. On the flip side, I wonder if adding the time dimension to the data (i.e., you could realistically have scans from every few weeks over the course of years) could significantly change that.

    Instead of looking at a single snapshot of a person, you're now looking at trends over time. We probably don't have the analytical tools to effectively evaluate medical imaging with that time dimension at such scale (because I assume it would be rare for someone to get MRIs so frequently), but maybe with more data and study, we'll be able to more definitively distinguish benign quirks from real concerns.

    Rather than a human comparing last year's scan to this year's scan, you're talking about computationally identifying outlying regions in the data that are trending towards areas of concern.

keiferski 6 hours ago

I have a mixed response:

1. It kind of makes sense that an AI imagery company would apply that to other novel applications of imagery and computing and try to do something cool with it.

2. Midjourney as a brand is all over the place and this feels -off, somehow. I think from a branding pov they should have just started a different company with a different name. Perhaps a single image-focused umbrella company named [Name] with Midjourney and this medtech company as separate subsidiaries.

3. AI imagery companies suddenly making medtech products and spas feels very “we don’t know what to do, so we’re going to throw spaghetti at the wall.” That doesn’t necessarily mean it’ll be bad, just that it’s not typically what you’d do if you’re working on something super successful already.

4. AFAIK they are entirely self-funded and so this really isn’t about VC scaling or anything like that. But that doesn’t mean they’re immune to the same cultural pressures.

  • raindropm 5 hours ago

    The pivot to do things they want as AI research lab is perfectly understandable, but also..weird, like their loyal userbase are mostly creative people, and this pivot have ZERO things to do with those audience at all.

    It also gives a vibe that they gives zero damn about to those creatives audience, or the things that made name for them in the past anymore, or that what I feel as their subscriber... I know that David Holz have his own unique way of doing things but it's still...weird!

    oh, and the hypetrain on X. yikes..

    • keiferski 5 hours ago

      Yeah, exactly. This would have been a cool side project company from the founder and team.

      Doing it under their main brand is very weird and I don’t quite see how it translates to creatives at all.

    • leothetechguy 2 hours ago

      to be fair I wouldn't call people operating AI Image generators creative people. At best they're people curious about the technology itself, anybody willing to learn and do it for the sake of being creative does it themselves.

      • altmanaltman 2 hours ago

        I think you're romanticizing art generation a bit. A lot of it operates like a normal working job, there is no magic "truly creative genuis", a lot of working artists treat it as their jobs and if a tool helps them get their job done, it is helpful.

        Not every creative profession is something where you create something you're proud of or you own. You're often just one part of a massive machine working on a project. It's a bit hard to keep sticking to the "creative noble artist" mythical vibe when it's a 9 to 5. And it's not fair to call them not creative just because you feel like it.

        • klabb3 1 hour ago

          Both ”creative mythical noble artist” and ”creative work is just work” are unhelpful strawman arguments. One is elitist, the other is reductionist.

          Creativity is neither a property of who you are or what you do. It’s about how you do it. It’s closer to a mindset of curiosity, wonder and play. For example, many programmers have a need for creativity within coding, but don’t feel they get it at their 9-5 job, and instead work a side project (like FOSS, indie game) because it’s a more creative experience. The point is: same person, same activity yet one is more creative than the other.

          The art/artifact itself is not creative. It’s the process that’s creative. Building a car can be creative. Buying a car is not. That’s not romanticizing and gatekeeping people who don’t have time to build a car. It would be genuinely misleading to equate those things.

      • tychez 1 hour ago

        This is just complete nonsense.

        You really think creative people are not interested in new forms of visual expression?

        This as simply being ignorant of art history.

    • davrosthedalek 2 hours ago

      This is somewhat speculative, but as I see it, there are two ways to retain excellent people:

      a) You pay them handsomely

      b) You do shit they like, they way the like.

      Sometimes it overlaps, of course. But this is essentially the reason why people stay in academia in the hard sciences. Most of us could earn considerably more in industry.

      I'm not sure midjourney can compete with the bigwigs on a). But doing healthcare stuff is probably more fulfilling to the researchers, and with less "we stole from all the artists" vibes.

      Of course, if this all works out, they might me able to do a) easily :)

  • altmanaltman 2 hours ago

    > “we don’t know what to do, so we’re going to throw spaghetti at the wall.

    this is pretty normal, i mean you have OpenAI and Anthropic trying the same as well. OpenAI is working on legal stuff [1] and also rolled out (or said they'll roll out) ChatGPT Health [2]. Then there was Sora etc.

    These companies need applications for their tokens and someone has to build them. If they can win even with one, that's a net benefit for them no?

    1 - https://www.artificiallawyer.com/2026/06/02/openai-targets-t...

    2 - https://openai.com/index/introducing-chatgpt-health/

  • oinoom 2 hours ago

    > we don’t know what to do, so we’re going to throw spaghetti at the wall

    My opinion is that the money is in the verticals as the models and harnesses built around them become commodities. Specializing in a vertical, especially where hardware is involved, creates a buffer between companies and the frontier labs. The frontier labs are spreading themselves thin trying to capture verticals like finance or legal but aren’t narrow enough to be as competitive as a company that is going for a more targeted approach.

  • andy99 1 hour ago

    On the “we don’t know what to do”, I think it’s cool that they are trying something medical with it. Success obviously isn’t assured, probably it isn’t even probable, but I’m happy to see companies try this rather than launch yet another whatever or start a consulting business. I hope as the field (AI generally) matures, more people decide to try life changing stuff with it.

  • daralthus 1 hour ago

    quite the opposite. it feels refreshing that ppl with talent and money can do inspiring things with it.

  • tclancy 1 hour ago

    “To the man with a new hammer, all problems look like a nail.”

owenthejumper 59 minutes ago

Almost nobody here is a doctor, and it shows...over diagnosis, over treatment, those are all terms that doctors learn about in medical school.

Image segmentation is a real problem, and achieving better precision is a good goal. The "golden" standard these days is likely https://github.com/wasserth/totalsegmentator, if someone can make it even more accurate, that would be very very good. But yet again, there are infinite amounts of variations in human bodies, which means even the best models focus only on segmenting known organs, and leave anything unknown alone.

  • khafra 55 minutes ago

    In the dark ages of machine learning, researchers tried to fit natural language into a defined, human-curated taxonomy.

    It kinda worked, for a reasonable amount of stuff; but failed quite a lot of the time, and there's an extremely long tail of things that would have been pragmatically impossible to ever address with that method--indeed, without adopting an entirely new, unsupervised model of language, continuous in places where the old way was discrete.

    • saghm 36 minutes ago

      It's not unreasonable to think that the level of acceptable risk for "the language model parsed my text wrong" is in average much higher than "the medical model misdiagnosed my condition". You can probably come up with scenarios where a language model behaving unexpectedly would have drastic consequences if you imagine them hooked up to automatic systems where they have immediate control over actions that can't easily be reversed, but like, that's why it's a bad idea to use them like that, and they're the exception rather than the rule. It seems plausible that scenarios like that for medical models are a lot closer to the norm than the exception, in which case the tolerance we have for them "filling in the gaps" incorrectly would need to be much smaller.

  • nicoburns 54 minutes ago

    If something like this became commonplace (and accurate enough), then it could be fantastic for research: enabling us to map out what variations are common and which aren't in a way that hasn't previously been feasible.

iDon 2 hours ago

> ... It starts by stepping into a shallow pool of golden light. > ... Together they act as both a choir and an audience

I think I'm not the target audience. I guess they are going to need to sign up a lot of people, to train on their scans + their medical outcomes. So the article is talking to people who will get enthused by it, which is more difficult after the question of 23AndMe data sale.

mNovak 7 hours ago

This is really interesting! And perhaps surprisingly doesn't trigger any immediate major technical red flags (as someone who has worked with MRI and phased array beamforming), as many HN HW articles do.

My only criticism from the tech video would be that they spend some time lauding the nanometer deflection sensitivity, which might lead some to believe that's indicative of the image resolution. It's not, and it's somewhat of a distraction -- that's just giving us amplitude information, which is comparatively less important than correlated time/phase across the 100k sensors. They do later on state ~mm resolution, which is still great!

Doppler and motion blur may be an issue (e.g. heart beating), as one slice requires a full ring of sequential exposures. But still way faster than MRI, so probably fine.

On a lighter note, it could seriously change the meaning of get FUCT (Full body Ultrasound Computational Tomography)!

  • intoXbox 5 hours ago

    MRI physicist here as well. I have a basic understanding of ultrasound, and this looks like an array of transducers organized to perform tomography, just as CT did for Xray.

    However Ultrasound quality depends highly on transducer-skin contact.

    Any physicists here to comment on the effects of sonar through liquid and the effects on image resolution and field of view?

    • lambdaone 2 hours ago

      This is precisely why you do it in water - the water-skin contact is effectively perfect, as is the water-transducer interface, and the body of water is easily characterizable; in effect you are scanning one large object that consists of a body of water that just happens to have a human body in it, and then extracting the body from that scan.

  • andrerath 3 hours ago

    Ultrasound researcher working on fast microvascular imaging here. Depends on the datarates, you can generally get pretty good blood flow data pretty fast, with <.5 seconds per slice if you do it with appropriate algorithms. A lot of this depends on motion though as you said, as the issue is generally getting a high-enough SNR (blood flow is generally 30-40 dB below tissue in energy, except for the biggest of vessels). Generally, higher frequencies have less of a separation between blood and tissue, but they have issue with attenuation. But I think with enough SNR (and with their element count that may indeed be possible), they could get pretty good blood flow data across the whole body.

unholiness 9 hours ago

So, on the one hand, this is interesting! Reducing radiation from CT scans is a noble cause on its own. If on top of that it could make tomography cheaper and easier, you could imagine getting earlier detection of aneurisms, fibrosis, cirrhosis, thrombosis, stenosis, even plausibly cancerous masses (along with plenty of over-detection).

On the other hand, nothing here substantiates this promise. We've got a video render of what a hypothetical device could look like. It's probably more than nothing (they got exclusive license on these butterfly chips in 2025, and it's at least plausible that the best solution to the data bottleneck in an absurdly noisy system like this is real-time AI image processing)... But it's certainly less than something. It's a hype video that doesn't prove feasibility of anything, yet.

EDIT: This is all in reaction to the second video on the announcement post[0], which is much more informative than anything on the page currently linked.

[0]https://www.midjourney.com/medical/blogpost

  • carlosdp 9 hours ago

    that's not a video render of a hypothetical device, that's a real video of the real working device, fwiw

    • datadrivenangel 8 hours ago

      It's just a render? Where's the video?

      • bastawhiz 8 hours ago

        The first video has the actual device (whether it's functioning or not) and the second video is a render.

      • roarcher 8 hours ago

        The first video appears to be real. Who knows if it's a working prototype or just a mockup, but the fact that it's held together by C-clamps and other stuff you could get at Home Depot makes me lean towards the former. If it was purely for marketing they'd probably make it look more polished.

        • moffkalast 4 hours ago

          > The first video appears to be real

          The video is clearly from Midjourney /s

    • mrandish 7 hours ago

      > the real working device

      Could you expand on the term "working"? Do you mean like "working to slowly lower a person into water while videos of animated Figma UIs play back on a monitor?" Or do you mean some crazy kind of "working", like "the ring of devices we see are scanning the organs of the woman we see and the images appearing on the monitor are those just-captured organ scans?"

  • justaguyonline 8 hours ago

    AI hype aside, this is one of those projects I'd like to know the open source stack of and the academic research behind. It's actually overlaps with an idea that started circling around in my head back when (deep) neural networks were the new hype cycle.

    What's the relation between sensor density and resolution? If their array could give femtometer resolution, how much could you drop the density when you only needed to detect forearm muscle movements through the skim.

    The way Ctl-labs was trying achieve the same results always seemed like it had fundamental physical limitations due to the nature of electromyography (to this software engineer...)

    • A_D_E_P_T 2 hours ago

      > femtometer resolution

      The diameter of a carbon atom is 154 picometers. Nobody's going down into the femtos. And you're not going to get atomic resolution, either, because humans move around too much and things like scanning electron microscopes need very stationary samples. Even microscopic vibrations can blur the final image.

      Which isn't to say that you couldn't get very good resolution...

      • davrosthedalek 2 hours ago

        Just for illustration: Gravitational wave detection is on the femtometer scale. The proton is about that size. We can measure these things, but the machines are, let's say, "big".

  • kibibu 8 hours ago

    I'm not putting my head under. How do we know this won't cause aneurysms? Damage eyes and ears? Getting a medical device approved takes time because of concerns like this.

    • mNovak 8 hours ago

      We already ultrasound babies in the womb, so one would hope this has been studied.

      • reverius42 5 hours ago

        Before ultrasound, they used to x-ray pregnant women to see the fetus. At that time, someone might have said "one would hope this has been studied"... unfortunately that practice went on for about 60 years before being stopped in the late 1950s.

        Side note: kinda crazy they had medical x-rays in the 1890s. X-Ray imaging was discovered in 1985 and used clinically within 2 years.

        But I do agree with your point, these days, I hope we're better about studying the potential dangers of current technologies we use.

    • zythyx 7 hours ago

      From my understanding of the post, the waves that are created are smaller than light waves, and there's no evidence that light waves, sound waves or sub-sonic waves have any aneurysm-causing effects.

      (I researched more and found in the video a value) The waves are 50 nanometres, and this is basically the equivalent of having a full body ultrasound. We've been doing baby ultrasounds for decades with no ill effects, so I can't imagine this being different

    • autoexec 7 hours ago

      It might not actually cause harm or strange effects to people's bodies, but I'd certainly feel better if it was tested and used by doctors in a hospital and not some "spa" since those tend to be poorly regulated and where all kinds of quackery takes place (https://www.aafp.org/afp/afp-community-blog/med-spa-industry...).

      The safety of the device itself is a concern, but so is the trustworthiness of the output. Midjourney already has some very questionable history with medical imagery (like this totally legit image of rat testicles published in "Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology" https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cc/AI_gener...)

      • ElFitz 6 hours ago

        > The safety of the device itself is a concern, but so is the trustworthiness of the output.

        And the safety of the data as well. Am I supposed to entrust full body scans to a startup?

      • Levitz 1 hour ago

        >Midjourney already has some very questionable history with medical imagery (like this totally legit image of rat testicles published in "Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology" https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cc/AI_gener...)

        I don't think "someone used their tool to produce a silly result and used it" qualifies as Midjourney having questionable history at all.

  • cornstalks 8 hours ago

    > Reducing radiation from CT scans is a noble cause on its own

    Is it? Linear No Threshold has largely been rejected at this point. https://jnm.snmjournals.org/content/early/2024/06/21/jnumed....

    • adastra22 7 hours ago

      We have no evidence in favor of the linear no threshold model. That is not the same as saying that we have evidence against it.

      • arcticbull 7 hours ago

        Sure but we don’t prove negatives for a reason - it’s impossible. We assume the null hypothesis.

        • unholiness 7 hours ago

          LNT is the null hypothesis. No one disagrees a linear model fits the data very well in high doses. If you want to argue that model doesn't work in low doses, you need a model with more parameters and sufficient data to fit it. The issue is that, at these low doses we want to differentiate, we're also looking at effect sizes that are hard to separate from noise, and sampling biases that are hard to erase. There's still lively and ongoing debate.

          • looofooo0 3 hours ago

            Well problem is that humans are so noisy through lifestyle, enviroment and genes that any proof for either is really hard.

      • haldujai 7 hours ago

        There is some evidence for hormesis - but yes no model is proven right now. LNT is the most conservative model and part of why it sticks around.

        A good primer: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2477686/

        • looofooo0 3 hours ago

          LNT does also damage, as people refusing necessary CT scans or countries switching of nuclear power because of fear.

    • dooglius 5 hours ago

      Your link does not support, and in fact refutes, your claim

  • camillomiller 3 hours ago

    This reeks of peak bubble, it’s ok say that.

  • z7 3 hours ago

    "I just tested my hand in a mini version of this scanner. Images that are higher quality than MRI, whole body captured in <1 minute, virtually free to run. This is going to change medicine."

    https://x.com/SebastianCaliri/status/2067452733356122303

    • Aromasin 2 hours ago

      I help engineers design traditional scanners (Philips, GE, Siemens, etc). To be frank, this statement stinks like utter pig shit.

      Some PE bro preaching miracles about a technology that I am sure they are in some way invested in making profit from does not convince me of it's legitimacy. My base instincts, from the unfortunate experience of working daily with PE bros, tell me the opposite in fact. It gives déjà vu of the Theranos hysteria.

      • femto 2 hours ago

        As someone in the medical imaging field, are you aware of anyone working on passive sonar for medical imaging? I'm curious, as it's something that I've always thought would be fun to work on.

        • Aromasin 1 hour ago

          For context I'm in engineering consultancy, so by no means an expert but I probably have enough experience to be on the other side of the Kruger curve dip.

          Passive sonar in the naval sense means listening only, not emitting. Do you mean imaging that relies solely on acoustic energy already present and emitted by the body? If so, then generally no. You have two types of "passive" imaging. First would be hardware-passive, as in MR elastography (most common), where the patient wears a transducer pad, and vibration is actively generated by a driver. You've then got algorithmically-passive, which is more analogue to passive sonar, reconstructing tissue stiffness from ambient broadband vibration without the emitted probing pulse, but that is very much entirely academic. I guess the question would be, why is it worth pursuing when you have something like optical coherence elastography (OCE) for non-invasive profiling. Doing it using noisy ultrasound method becomes redundant. There are other methods, but the outcome is the same.

          Generally (this is true for all systems, not just humans) you need to induce energy into it to more effectively measure it's output. Think of it like a bell - if I want to hear the note it produces, it's much easier to hear what this is if I ring it with a hammer. Granted, it will be "passively" resonating to a point where, with a sensitive enough sensor, I could probably pick up the output without the hammer - but that is a pointless problem to solve. I could hit a bell with a soft hammer a million times over without causing damage to it. The lifetime of the person hitting it with a hammer is far shorter than the accumulative damage to the bell before it breaks. The same is true for humans. You could effectively run a very low-energy, 60Hz vibration through a person (which is how the pads work) for multiple lifetimes before it would cause significant damage, so there comes little point in solving that problem. As such, true "passive" imaging is functionally pointless if your outcome is "safely image a patient". You're overengineering your solution to solve a problem that is only relevant if your patient was planning on living for 1000+ years.

      • Pay08 2 hours ago

        What does PE mean?

        • oinoom 2 hours ago

          private equity

      • wasabi991011 27 minutes ago

        The X post is obviously biased, but I couldn't spot any obvious scientific mistakes in the actual announcement video.

        Someone else linked to this preprint which seems related [1]. Would you take a look and say whether it seems legitimate?

        [1] Whole Cross-Sectional Human Ultrasound Tomography” https://arxiv.org/pdf/2307.00110

tgsovlerkhgsel 8 hours ago

I think a lot of medical diagnosis could be solved with mass data collection if it was cheap enough. Right now, blood draws are somewhat routinely done because they provide a lot of human-interpretable indicators from a small number of values, and there is some evidence that e.g. "dogs can smell cancer" etc. (i.e. some diseases cause detectable odors).

With a big enough data set of [all kinds of bio values, including ones considered irrelevant for that disease] labeled with diagnoses, I suspect we could get very fast and accurate automatic diagnoses, even from a limited data set currently considered uncorrelated. Rather than going to your primary care physician, you'd go into the standardized, mass-produced and thus reasonably cheap everything-scanner, and you could likely get a more accurate diagnosis (or at least "things to check") than the average doctor would be able to give you under the practical constraints they typically operate under (time, available information/diagnostics).

This goes in that direction, and I'm really excited to see where it goes. I could imagine that given enough training data, ML models will be able to pick up on minute details that make it possible to diagnose diseases that weren't historically considered ultrasound-diagnoseable from this kind of detailed ultrasound.

I think combining it with gas chromatography/mass spectrometry of e.g. breath or blood/sweat/urine samples would also have the potential to be a cost-effective diagnosis method - lots of data, probably not all too useful for human interpretation, but would open the potential to walk up to a machine, breathe into it, spit into it, pee into it, give it a swab, and have it come up with an accurate diagnosis without invasive testing. If mass produced, the cost of something like this could easily drop below the cost of a typical doctor's visit. (I googled it and it seems like GCMS is already used for some diagnoses, but screening only for a few specific diseases rather than "throw ML at it and try to diagnose everything").

  • kilbuz 7 hours ago

    false positives are a real problem

    • adastra22 7 hours ago

      Only if you let them. The false positive thing is a nonissue that only arises from assuming you would respond to information a certain way.

      • Forgeties79 6 hours ago

        I don't really get what this means. A false positive causes issues inherently - you don't know if it's right or wrong. It's noise which is bad for care, and it's anxiety-inducing for patients which is also bad. It produces worse outcomes for everyone. There isn't a "choice" or assumption here, you respond to a positive as if it's accurate until you know it isn't. This is a known issue. Hell Scrubs did an episode about the negative impact of full, generalized body scans on a patient's wellbeing decades ago.

        • adastra22 3 hours ago

          The medical industry should NOT be paternalistic towards patients. People have a right to decide for themselves and be treated as adults capable of informed consent. Thankfully that model is starting to change, although there is much inertia.

          Any test that is approved for use would have a better-than-random outcome distribution. Preconditioned on that, a test result is still useful no matter how uncertain. It is never the case that more information leaves you in a worse position.

          I have personal experience here:

          Every year I have elected to have ultrasounds done of my major internal organs. In the past two visits, the technicians spotted multiple developing growths in my liver and now kidneys. These are very likely to be benign cysts, but one piece of blood work that could be a marker for cancer is inconclusive. The odds are still high that this is totally benign and will either clear up on its own, or at least stop growing and cause no further issue. Still:

          1. I'm getting my blood work done now far more frequently (twice per year instead of every other year), with specialized/not typically ordered screening tests;

          2. I am redoing the ultrasound every year to track progress; and

          3. I am actually taking advice about losing weight and exercise far more seriously than I otherwise would, as these issues often resolve with weight loss.

          I am actually healthier now than I was two years ago, and feel better about my physical and mental well-being. All while staying on top of what could have be a life threatening issue if left untreated and ignored.

          I look forward to the day when I can go get a monthly MRI-like scan. That would be wonderful.

          • Forgeties79 1 hour ago

            Well now we’re going down a different path. Telling people to go burn through mountains of cash to get tests they don’t need is not ethical.

        • simianwords 3 hours ago

          > I don't really get what this means. A false positive causes issues inherently - you don't know if it's right or wrong. It's noise which is bad for care, and it's anxiety-inducing for patients which is also bad.

          No its not. This is extremely paternalistic. Humans know how to understand noise and statistics. You don't get to decide that for me. I want more lives saved with more information.

      • jibal 6 hours ago

        That makes no sense at all, unless you're saying that people should respond to all such information by ignoring it.

        • reverius42 5 hours ago

          In which case, why bother getting the information in the first place?

        • Sankozi 4 hours ago

          There is a lot of space between ignoring and doing invasive dangerous operation after some blot was spotted on some imaging diagnosis.

        • adastra22 3 hours ago

          You could repeat the test, perhaps on a more frequent interval to keep an eye on it. You could follow up with a more specific test, or do confirming blood work. In the meantime you can adjust your diet as a precaution, or get motivated to get in shape just in case.

          There's plenty of room between "go under the knife" and "ignore altogether."

        • simianwords 3 hours ago

          yeah? give adequate accurate information to people and let them decide what to do with the information.

          if someone told you, you had a .01% chance of getting a disease for example, aren't you better off with that information? even if it is noisy?

        • jibal 2 hours ago

          P.S. The responses ignore what I actually responded to, which was a claim that "The false positive thing is a nonissue" -- where the "thing" is 99% false positives. The only way to respond to information such that "the false positive thing" becomes "a nonissue" is to never respond to it at all. The responses to my comment all address some strawman.

    • simianwords 3 hours ago

      ??? how is more information worse than less? if you know the extent of false positives -- use it! its better than having no information.

      the question should be: does cost of obtaining extra information pay off in lives saved. i would say yeah obviously.

  • jrflowers 7 hours ago

    > pee into it, give it a swab, and have it come up with an accurate diagnosis without invasive testing.

    Somebody should make a startup based around the idea of diagnosing diseases through eg. a drop of blood. Probably need a bunch of big name investors though

  • aquafox 7 hours ago

    The problem is: Since we don't regularly full-body scan healthy people, we don't know how healthy, or say, still ok, looks like. This will create a lot of false positives and potential harm from unneccessary follow-up procedures and treatments.

    • wkoszek 5 hours ago

      The idea here is to make scans very common and regular, hopefully from early age of the patient. It could be like a blood pressure measurement at CVS.

  • CJefferson 7 hours ago

    Even at a smaller scale, I was shocked to go to the hospital in China and literally the first thing done was a blood sample, scanned under about 30 metrics, took about 15 minutes after the same was take. The results were sent straight to my phone. That sample had some horrendous results, so I then skipped the queue and got straight to see a doctor who already had all my numbers up on screen before he spoke to the for the first time, meaning he could immediately put me on an antibiotic drip.

    • kranke155 4 hours ago

      Why is this shocking ?

      • CJefferson 2 hours ago

        In the UK I see a medical practitioner before any tests, always.

  • arcticbull 7 hours ago

    Don’t make me tap the sign.

    Bayes Theorem: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bayes'_theorem

    There’s a very good reason we don’t test asymptomatic people in low incidence populations. Basically all positives are false positives when you do that, no matter how accurate the test is.

    When you’re testing healthy randos for everything the odds of a positive being false have so many 9s it would make an SRE weep.

    Unless this is accurate to a degree previously unheard of in medical science it’s a boondoggle, and I can’t help but notice there’s no mention of accuracy.

    Unfortunately that’s just basic statistics.

    • hereme888 7 hours ago

      That's precisely where medicine is headed: personalized medicine.

      You [hopefully] won't have to become a rare missed diagnosis because you didn't fit the demographic for this or that screening test.

      Cost of genomic analysis is exponentially decreasing, and so much progress is happening so quickly.

      Consider for example how in cardiology we advanced from ASCVD's 10-yr prognosis, to the PREVENT 30-yr prognosis. And still most providers are using the ASCVD score for their patients.

      • arcticbull 7 hours ago

        You’re dealing with populations here. Literally the odds of a positive being false would be over 90%. Much higher in the more rare conditions. I’m not exaggerating. That means every almost every follow up you do is a waste of time, money and limited resources, denying care to those who need it. Including you when you actually do need it. It also exposes you to the risks of unnecessary follow-ups like infection. Your expected outcome is worse this way.

        The chance a positive is real is so low you may as well just point to a body part and get it biopsied.

        A positive from this kind of test is statistically meaningless.

        • munificent 7 hours ago

          It's scary in both directions.

          If you let it give out tons of false positives, then patients are trained to ignore it when it cries wolf.

          If you dial it back so that it gives out fewer positives, then now it starts giving out false negatives and not helping sick people.

          • KingMob 4 hours ago

            Heh, Signal Detection Theory strikes again! This problem is as old as detecting whether a radar blip is a WW2 bomber on its way or not.

            Sadly, there's no perfect threshold when the signal and noise distributions overlap substantially, just different trade-offs.

            (Love CI, btw!)

        • charcircuit 4 hours ago

          That doesn't sound like a useful test then. Instead use tests with fewer false positives.

    • gfodor 7 hours ago

      You can just run more tests to get increased statistical power.

      • cbolton 6 hours ago

        No you can't. Statistical tests assume independent data points. Testing the same individual repeatedly would be pseudoreplication, leading to wrong conclusions.

        If you mean run different tests, where you collect different kinds of data from the same individual, sure but that's not something you can "just do" in the general case.

    • moralestapia 7 hours ago

      Many smaht people have already pointed that out.

      It's news to no one that tests are imperfect.

      Do you have any concrete solution to that? Anything of value?

      • arcticbull 7 hours ago

        Yes, don’t do tests on asymptomatic low-risk people until you can demonstrate that a positive result has any meaning whatsoever.

        • aipatselarom 7 hours ago

          Hypertension is asymptomatic for years and is prevalent in every demographic. Leaving it unattended it can cause stroke, heart attack, or organ damage through long-term vessel strain, by which time damage may be irreversible; detecting it on time can prevent this with lifestyle changes and medication.

          Diabetes is asymptomatic for years and is prevalent in every demographic. Leaving it unattended it can cause damage to blood vessels, nerves, kidneys, and eyes through chronic high blood sugar, by which time complications may be advanced; detecting it on time can prevent or delay this with treatment and lifestyle changes.

          Hyperlipidemia is asymptomatic for years and is prevalent in every demographic. Leaving it unattended it can cause artery blockage through cholesterol buildup, by which time heart attack or stroke may occur; detecting it on time can prevent this with diet and medication.

          Kidney disease is asymptomatic for years and is prevalent in every demographic. Leaving it unattended it can cause kidney failure through gradual loss of function, by which time dialysis may be needed; detecting it on time can slow progression.

          Glaucoma is asymptomatic for years and is prevalent in every demographic. Leaving it unattended it can cause irreversible vision loss through optic nerve damage, by which time blindness may be permanent; detecting it on time can preserve vision.

          --------

          I'm SO glad you're not my family doctor!

          • arcticbull 6 hours ago

            At least the top 4, unclear about the 5th, are strongly associated with obesity. That would make someone high-risk and testing potentially warranted in like 70% of the population. Asymptomatic and low-risk is what I said. The incidence of hypertension is so high in the general population it’s almost always statistically supported (even though basically every doctors office takes it wrong, even cardiologists, amazingly).

            On the other end of the spectrum, what doesn’t make sense is testing a random person off the street for Ebola. The prevalence approaches zero and symptoms are fairly noticeable, so any positive test is definitely wrong.

            Most diseases are in between and have to be evaluated case by case, not buckshot.

            You may be particularly interested to hear that there’s little evidence to support regular checkups in most adults beyond blood pressure testing and cervical cytology.

            > Given the lack of favorable evidence and the potential adverse effect, primary care providers should consider the fact that general health checks, beyond the screening interventions shown to have benefit, likely have little or no effect on important health outcomes. Some of the interventions with demonstrated benefit have sufficiently large effects that a uniform application is warranted (blood pressure measurement and cervical cytology screening). In others, the trade‑off between benefits and harms is so close that patients should be involved in fully shared decision making regarding their participation (breast and colon cancer screening).

            https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31642821/

            I suspect your doctor would agree with me. See if they’ll test you for Ebola, for instance. Not because you have symptoms but just cuz.

            • bigfudge 2 hours ago

              I mostly agree with you by one small wrinkle is that the evaluation of screening is normally against a criteria of cost effectiveness as well as safety. So for some conditions, if cost effectiveness was the barrier to rollout it might still be worth it if you are rich?

          • ascorbic 5 hours ago

            The decision as to whether mass screening is justified or not is complex, and varies a lot by test/condition/population etc. Luckily there are lots of smart people whose job it is to do these caclulations.

            In your list, 1-4 are common enough, the tests are accurate enough, the costs of intervention are low enough and the benefits of early intervention are high enough to justify screening, which is why they do generally screen for them at least in hgiher risk groups. The other two are more mixed, which is why mass screening is less common.

            All the evidence for full body scans is that they are not justified for asymptomatic people. The false positives are high, the costs of these false positives are high, and the imporved outcomes are too low to justify them. If you want one, go ahead, but realise that almost anything it finds is likely to be false either positive or not likely to ever cause a problem, and you'd have to deal with the worry and invasive tests and even surgery in aid of something that may never cause any trouble.

    • appplication 7 hours ago

      So you are certainly correct but you can also tighten up your definitions for true positives as you have more information on your false positives. There may exist additional signal as well.

      To your point though I think there is a difference between collecting and evaluating additional data sources and using them as diagnostic tools.

      I suppose I fundamentally disagree with the implication of your post that there is no value in gathering further data for these reasons, it would seem to suggest we’re already diagnostically optimal and could not do better with additional signal.

      • arcticbull 7 hours ago

        Sure collecting more data makes sense. We agree there. If that gets you to the required degree of statistical confidence my argument is moot.

      • jibal 6 hours ago

        Positive for what, exactly? Quoting convnet, above:

        > The downside, and the reason why most doctors do not recommend full body scans, is that every human body is a bit weird and there will almost always be something "wrong" that will be visible in a full body scan. This can lead to unnecessary testing, anxiety, and even unnecessary procedures. Many of these oddities flagged by the scan would never have caused any actual issues had the patient never been aware.

        The fundamental problem is that you generally can't diagnose simply from shapes. Scans show shapes, shapes cause concern, concern leads to invasive procedures, results are negative.

        Also, overdependency on "spas" for health information could lead to an atrophy of other sorts of medical information gathering and diagnosis. e.g., there's no mention in the dreamy description of this spa experience of getting a blood draw or a patellar reflex test.

        • srdjanr 3 hours ago

          The root comment is talking about adding blood, breath, urin, spit... analysis. For body imaging only I agree with you. But if we add all this, I guess we'd be able to rule out many false positives

          • jibal 2 hours ago

            Your "guess" is not merely incorrect but logically invalid ... such added tests (which ex hypothesi are all negative) have no bearing on false positives from tomography.

    • krzat 7 hours ago

      If this argument was as solid as you say, then all routine checks would be pointless.

      I don't know about traditional blood testing, but a permanent implant which checks HR, pressure, glucose, temperature & oxidation would be pretty useful, not necessarily to diagnose anything, but to provide data for doctor when patient has actual symptomps.

      • ricardobayes 6 hours ago

        They kind of are. Spain doesn't have yearly physicals, and during a GP visit, they don't even take your blood pressure. Blood tests are extremely uncommon, unlike in British medicine, where they take your blood pressure every time and blood tests are so prevalent people usually request one from time to time despite having no symptoms. Spain's example showed the above (or the lack of) doesn't increase all-cause mortality and even excelling in longevity statistics.

        https://www.rieti.go.jp/en/columns/a01_0455.html This japanese article found "No clear-cut evidence exists to determine whether undergoing health checks leads to greater longevity and/or lower medical expenditures."

        • arcticbull 6 hours ago

          Several published papers agree. There is in fact little evidence to support regular checkups if you’re asymptomatic.

          https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31642821/

          And blood pressure is especially pernicious, basically every doctors office measures it wrong so the results aren’t particularly useful. Many use the wrong size cuff for example, or don’t give people time to relax before a reading. A ton of people have white coat hypertension, high BP only because they’re in a doctors office.

          https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC1120072/

          I saw a paper that showed only 36% of cardiologists did it right.

      • jibal 6 hours ago

        Math does indeed make for solid arguments. If you want to make a counterargument then you have to address their math, which you didn't.

    • ricardobayes 7 hours ago

      Medicine is not a statistical field. I've seen many times doctors dismissing someone "you're young, you can't have X". Although there is some truth in what you're saying: full body CT scans are on the rise now.

    • zurfer 4 hours ago

      I heard the same argument from my doctor when I wanted a blood scan.

      But what's the intention? If you do a scan and then try to find everything that is wrong about you, you're 100% right, there will be false positives and unnecessary panic/medication etc.

      However if you just collect data for months and years and WHEN you get a symptom you have a lot more data then we should be able to give better diagnosis faster. If we do that for long enough as humanity and there is data sharing the accuracy of the whole thing will increase a lot.

      • londons_explore 3 hours ago

        This. All diagnoses are "given this set of symptoms and test results, which is the most likely issue".

        By having a whole slew of test results already, you will have much better priors.

    • Sankozi 4 hours ago

      Testing healthy person for any illness by definition has infinite number of nines in false positive rate.

      Problem is we never know who is healthy. That is why we are doing the test.

    • RobertoG 3 hours ago

      The argument has some merits, but we should remember that, from the point of view of Bayes, you could apply the same argument to symptoms, which is only evidence. High odds of a false positive, means that you have not enough evidence, not that you have not useful information.

    • dkbrk 2 hours ago

      You've got that completely backwards. Correctly applying Bayes' theorem, if an anomaly is observed you incorporate the prior into the calculation of the posterior probability. You don't just give up and say "the prior is miniscule so the likelihood is useless".

      And then, even that's not enough. Decision theory needs to be applied to decide what action to take. That means taking into account the expected QALYs, cost and inconvenience across the distribution of possible outcomes. There's a whole spectrum of possible decisions, from immediately performing surgery, performing an invasive test like a biopsy, performing other less invasive tests, scheduling a follow-up non-invasive test at a later date, or just following a regular schedule of non-invasive tests and looking for any evolution along a longer time period.

      The real problem is the binary thinking of either "we think you have X" and therefore tests must be performed or "we think you don't have X" and therefore tests shouldn't be performed. If medical organizations adopted empirically grounded decision frameworks, by applying them consistently doctors would be able to see something anomalous, assess that the risk isn't high enough to warrant immediate investigation, and be protected from a lawsuit in the unlikely case it was, in fact, something. And then we could do away with this "if we look we might find something" nonsense, which is pure fallacy.

    • torginus 2 hours ago

      This is why you have multiple successive panels. If there's a disease that happens for 1 in 10k people, and you have a test with 1% FPR, 99 of 100 people will be false positive.

      But what you can do then, is either run a more expensive, elaborate test or one that's proven to be statistically independent on the positive testing population.

      FPR can even be a good thing. Let's say you have an expensive test with a very low false positive rate. Then you can mix together 100 samples, and get a test with a much worse FPR 100 times cheaper. Then you can repeat the same individually on the positive population.

      This is fully automatic and you don't even think about it. Btw, this is why mass testing, and public healthcare can be better. You can amortize the cost of things across a large number of people for no disadvantage.

  • convnet 7 hours ago

    It's a controversial and complicated idea. The downside, and the reason why most doctors do not recommend full body scans, is that every human body is a bit weird and there will almost always be something "wrong" that will be visible in a full body scan. This can lead to unnecessary testing, anxiety, and even unnecessary procedures. Many of these oddities flagged by the scan would never have caused any actual issues had the patient never been aware.

    While there are many individual stories of full-body scans detecting early-stage cancer before it became symptomatic, there seems to be a general sense among doctors that implementing full-body scanning on a population level would lead to overall more harm than good. The thinking is that it is better to do regular targeted screenings for diseases that you're in a risk group for (e.g. colonoscopies, mammograms, cancer marker blood tests, etc.) rather than full-body scans.

    I'm not a doctor, and I personally do find the idea of full-body scans very appealing, but I also know that if the scan detects a possible cancer, I wouldn't be able to just ignore it if the doctor tells me it's likely ok. Any time I felt any pain or any sort of symptom in that general area, I know I would worry about it. Maybe that's worth it for the potential life-saving results, but it definitely is a cost of this type of scan that needs to be acknowledged.

    • sroussey 7 hours ago

      If the whole population had a full body scan every quarter, the “weird” things would feel more like the noise they are.

      But we would have great data over time, both individually (weird tends to only matter if they are changing) and as a population.

      • jibal 7 hours ago

        The fundamental problem is that you generally can't diagnose simply from shapes. Scans show shapes, shapes cause concern, concern leads to invasive procedures, results are negative.

        • user43928 5 hours ago

          Are people really going to perform invasive procedures over mere concern if there are no symptoms and the doctor recommends against it?

          • icantevenhold 5 hours ago

            People take horse dewormer against COVID so yes they will do all kinds of irrational things

            • rlt 4 hours ago

              Oh we're still doing the "horse dewormer" thing despite 250 million humans taking it each year?

              • multjoy 3 hours ago

                Yes, because it's nonsense and those 250m humans need to get off Twitter.

          • jibal 2 hours ago

            There are numerous comments here from experienced people addressing this. Yes, that happens and a doctor who dismisses the concern can be sued for malpractice if something actually does show up, so they are put in a difficult position. For some reason you just assume that doctors will recommend against an invasive procedure when there is a positive tomography result.

            Review the numerous comments that address this as a statistical issue -- which it very much is when talking about the scale that Midjourney is claiming.

        • stalfie 4 hours ago

          It's worse then that unfortunately. Even when invasive tests are positive, and we think we caught a cancer early, we know from population statistics that the reality is that often nothing would have happened. So we don't even truly know how to tell a cancer that will kill you from one won't. And we don't really know what it is that we don't know.

          This is more true for some cancers then other though. Prostate, breast, and maybe melanoma are the worst in this regard. This is why prostate and breast cancer screening programmes are controversial, although the needle is swinging towards them being more useful as surgeries and treatments get better. Some other cancers like pancreatic cancer will always kill you eventually, so it's always good to catch them. It's a nuanced problem.

          This whole issue is called "overdiagnosis", and personally I used to be obsessed with it. Being aware of it mostly caused a lot of hand wringing and grief, it's just easier to believe that every cancer you catch is a good thing. However, one of the broader issues is that we will never know what we don't know if we don't look. So there exists another perspective that all the suffering caused by overdiagnosis will eventually pay off in the long term. This is the "collect all the data for science/AI" perspective, and I've personally tentatively adopted it myself, although perhaps that's just because it's nicer to believe that you do some good even when you do harm. I think it's more likely that [novel cancer therapies](https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-026-10738-7) will solve the "harm" part of treatment before we solve overdiagnosis.

          The reality is that important breakthroughs are often entirely unrelated to the data for you are collecting, and even worse that possibly helpful data is locked away due to regulation and never used. This is kinda why I've come to make some kind of peace with private clinics scamming people with whole body MRIs, as I'm sure they're secretly selling the data which might lead to some good. However, they would probably do even more good if they didn't exist so they didn't jack up the prices for MRI machines by inflating demand. The marketing they do is the most morally reprehensible part of the whole deal, as it's usually just lying and creating health anxiety for profit. The fact that midjourney here is marketing themselves in this direction is giving me some serious Theranos vibes. Quick and cheap MRI equivalents would be really useful in the clinic, and it would have to spend a few decades there to prove it is useful before moving on to the "spa" stage. That they are trying to market a render of an idea directly to the wellness crowd firmly puts this in the "scam" folder for me. The fact that midjourney is mostly irrelevant now also fits well with this, making it likely that this is either a marketing stunt or a desperate pivot to get funded. Hopefully there are not that many suckers who will put their VC money down on this loosing bet.

      • friendzis 6 hours ago

        > If the whole population had a full body scan every quarter, the “weird” things would feel more like the noise they are.

        That's a tautology. We already have quite robust methods for detecting developed anomalies, treating every anomaly below standard human-to-human variation effectively raises the noise floor to already developed anomalies, defeating the purpose of population wide routine scans.

        • ramblerman 6 hours ago

          If you think the premise and conclusion of Op's statement form a tautology then you agree with him strongly.

      • stymaar 5 hours ago

        Maybe it would end up fine “in the long run” but you cannot ignore the significant issues arising at the beginning (and at each release of a more performant tool): what do you do if you find something that “shouldn't be there".

      • aswegs8 5 hours ago

        Without clear hypotheses you will have a lot of false positives. Which are quite costly in healthcare.

      • blensor 4 hours ago

        How do you measure the body regularly without potentially introducing problems just by measuring it?

        • bialpio 4 hours ago

          My understanding is that both MRIs and ultrasounds do not introduce problems.

          • ahtihn 3 hours ago

            MRIs by themselves no, but depending on what you want to actually see you need to inject a contrast agent which is probably not something you want to do too frequently.

            • Levitz 1 hour ago

              Nobody is proposing this though

            • bialpio 1 hour ago

              Good point, I was not thinking about MRIs with contrast.

    • jaggederest 7 hours ago

      I think the anodyne to this is - and I admit the degree to which this is indicative of my biases! - more data, especially early on. Getting a good baseline before you have really any significant chance of most cancers to be able to do within-individual diffs, effectively, might be a big deal.

      It might also reveal that every MRI shows ghost artifacts a half a dozen times that make it longitudinally useless, of course. I'm not foolish enough to think that epidemiologists haven't thought of this.

    • Beijinger 6 hours ago

      "It's a controversial and complicated idea. "

      It is neither controversial nor complicated to detect some cancers by scent.

      Taking the "headspace" of something is also not really complicated.

      There are people who can reliably smell/detect Parkinson:

      https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2020/03/23/8202745...

      • philistine 6 hours ago

        You gloom on one aspect, the smell. OP focuses instead on full body scans themselves, and the irrelevant issues with everyone's bodies they would highlight.

    • david_shi 6 hours ago

      I've heard this argument before and it's always seemed downstream of capacity constraints and the current incentives of the healthcare industry.

      There's a reason why billionaires like David Rockefeller, Larry Ellison, and Rupert Murdoch are able to live much longer lives than average, and having an oncall health team (that I'm sure does frequent testing and monitoring) is a big contributor to that.

      More testing and data collection doesn't mean that every single anomaly would need to be investigated or communicated with the patient, but would provide a better longitudinal view that can help with disease prevention and health optimization.

      • vasco 6 hours ago

        It's obviously a lie to get us to accept no tests due to limited machines. The same as when COVID started masks "didn't help" because they didn't yet secure enough supply for everyone, then when they did, suddenly the masks helped.

        Every system that exists as a black box is more understandable with more sensing, not less. Our bodies are not special.

        It's also ridiculous that the proposition goes like:

        1. Doctor knows some tests will flag tumors or variations that look weird and that we shouldn't then go investigate all of them

        2. Doctor shuts off their brain and will then investigate all of them by doing invasive procedures

        Just knowing how many such variations there are and if they grow or not is useful information. But the doctors pretend like they are super smart before the test and super dumb right after.

        • Paracompact 5 hours ago

          It's not the same doctors saying they themselves are simultaneously smart and stupid. It's "smart" doctors saying that as a point of policy, it is not a good idea for biomedical companies to try to make a buck off of popularizing unnecessary diagnostics, because anxious patients will by chance or by intention find a "dumb" doctor who will agree to perform invasive procedures. (Have you ever heard a tech person say that the tech world has a lot of stupid ideas? It's the same thing.) Look up what happened with South Korea diagnosis vs. mortality rates when they instituted national thyroid screenings in the 90s.

          > Every system that exists as a black box is more understandable with more sensing, not less.

          With perfect humans in a perfect society, maybe. But such is ignoring the elephants in the room here, from the actual experts on the topic.

        • bigfudge 5 hours ago

          This kind of thinking (that it’s an obvious lie, perpetrated by a cabal) is the sort of superstitious bullshit that is going to jet us all killed. Look up Bayes theorem. As yourself how good a test would have to be if the base rate is low. Wonder what the probability of harm might be if the next advised test was invasive and the patients was anxious because a lump had been detected.

          • vasco 5 hours ago

            You should read til the end! No cabal, just stupidity and believing other people are stupid instead of telling them the truth and expecting them to act smart based on the information.

            Ask yourself, do you think billionnaires have yearly MRIs or that they wait for later because the doctor and themselves will be anxious? It's an argument that treats regular people as stupid.

            • bigfudge 2 hours ago

              First, many regular people are “stupid” in the sense that they do get anxious about things that ar slow probability and are not anxious about things that are high probability.

              If you are a billionaire you also have a doctor with the time and expertise to properly evaluate the evidence in a Bayesian framework, and you have time to talk to them and understand and implications. That isn’t scalable.

              Also, it’s quite likely that billionaires are having lots of unnecessary procedures and that harm is being caused. The mri scans are not the reason they live longer!

              • vasco 46 minutes ago

                Ok but now the argument shifted from "More MRI = bad" to "More MRI = okay as long as doctors do a good job and have enough time". I agree with that. My point was just that it's possible to get to a point where everyone having yearly MRIs is doable because the issue isn't with more information in itself, it's with doctors not having enough time for the patient.

        • lazyasciiart 4 hours ago

          So do you think the doctors should hide the data from you so you don’t know anything looks weird, or tell you it looks weird but they don’t think it’s worth investigating it? And do you think the average patient will say “ok that’s fine, I’m not getting a second opinion and if I die my family will sue you into the grave too”?

          • vasco 2 hours ago

            I believe doctors should tell you the truth and not assume you will do things later that are detrimental with the information as that has a lot of bad consequences.

            Case in point, doing that during COVID I think amplified the wave of antivaxxers and medical denialists. Which itself had in my opinion a way worse effect on global health than almost anything else recently because now you have to convince a number of people to trust the medical system again.

      • kakwa_ 4 hours ago

        A sample size of 3 is hardly statistically significant.

        From what I could found, billionaires die on average at ~83 years old. ( https://strygin.substack.com/p/how-billionaires-die )

        It's not far off what a decent health care system is able to provide in most wealthy countries. It's even somewhat lower actually.

        It's difficult to assess the risk factors, but in the end, I have the feeling their additional medical staff and their ability to "cut the queue" (S. Jobs-style) just barely offsets the additional common risk factors (stress, long hours, segregated life), specially if we compare to the upper-middle class.

        In the end, there is no magic $100M pill giving you 10 more years. And in truth, access to food, drinking water, a non-toxic environment and really basic healthcare & medicine (vaccines, antibiotics) probably already brings you at a fairly high life expectancy.

    • wkoszek 5 hours ago

      All doctors say this, and that sort of drove me away from healthtech. As if there were absolutely no way to take a step in a direction of fixing it.

      The faster and earlier we start to scan everyone regularly, as long as scanning methods aren't invasive, the more certainty we'll have what to warn people about and what not to tell them. Perhaps with the regular screening (imaging quarterly, if the scan is fast) you could see what is growing and what isn't.

      • poilcn 5 hours ago

        Healthcare resources are very limited, you'd overwhelm it with lots of "yeah that's a defect, but 40% have it", things that would go away on its own, false positives, things that do not require urgent intervention, 10x increase of hypochondriacs and health deterioration caused by anxiety

        You'd have a system where every resource is allocated for diagnostics, but no medical staff to treat it

        Also a significant part of population avoids screening even if they are not required to paid anything from their pocket

        • rlt 5 hours ago

          Maybe it's not a coincidence an AI company is building this thing...

        • mommys_little 4 hours ago

          That's the real problem! That healthcare costs are a goldmine for Big Pharma instead of being a cheap and widely available service. And, as someone said before, the huge amount of data it produces, would decrease the rate of false positives to zero in no time! And your arguments about hypochondriacs are very similar to those that were once given against teaching reading to all people!

          • nxobject 3 hours ago

            > That's the real problem! That healthcare costs are a goldmine for Big Pharma instead of being a cheap and widely available service.

            I thought we were railing against Big Hospital/Big Insurance here? They'd love a cheap diagnostic.

        • moffkalast 4 hours ago

          Yeah I'm wondering where exactly people think we'd find the millions of additional MRI machines and technicians to run them to make this somehow viable, as if the current ones are not pretty much at 100% capacity at all times.

          • dmurray 4 hours ago

            MRI machines cost in the six figures [0], last 10+ years and could reasonably do thousands of full-body scans a year. That's basically free by healthcare standards. Rent for the room to put it in would cost more in most cities.

            MRI operators are specially trained technicians, because these are complicated machines. But like, semi trucks and photocopiers are fantastically complicated machines, and we seem to be able to keep a pipeline of people trained to operate and maintain them.

            So I don't think there's an economic blocker for giving everyone a full-body MRI scan every year or two.

            [0] https://www.blockimaging.com/bid/92623/mri-machine-cost-and-...

            • luesterklemme 3 hours ago

              What are you reasonably expecting to find in a full body MRI? Besides the notion that a "full body MRI" is not a procedure that is routinely done anyway and lasts upwards of an hour. It's not the scanner that is the limiting economic factor.

              • dmurray 3 hours ago

                Right. I'm replying to the commentator who questioned how we could possibly purchase and staff enough MRI machines to give people regular full body scans.

                I'm saying there's no question that would be economically viable. The reason we don't and shouldn't do it is that it wouldn't be medically valuable, even compared to other cheap interventions.

          • ben_w 3 hours ago

            The website is calling for their full-body MRI-replacing ultrasonic scanners to be so cheap they're part of a spa session.

            TBH, this is already a red flag for me, like so many other "tech bro invents X" stories, though I am also aware of stories were "company realises Y is overpriced in medical purchases, makes Y cheaper, finds all hospitals think it is a scam and refuse to buy unless they raise prices".

            • zarzavat 2 hours ago

              Conventional ultrasound scanners are already cheap. Why can't a big ultrasound scanner be cheap too?

              What makes MRI machines expensive is that they are big helium-cooled superconducting magnets that have to be continuously kept at a few Kelvin.

              • ben_w 40 minutes ago

                As others are saying in these comments, MRI machines themselves aren't particularly expensive machines on a per-scan basis, to the extent the machines themselves are often left underutilised.

                But even if you disregard that, there's this:

                  It starts by stepping into a shallow pool of golden light. You then begin to descend into the water. Your body passes through a ring of underwater sensors, each acting like a dolphin, using its echolocation. The sensors send ultrasonic sound waves through your body from every angle. With enough waves, and enough angles, we form an image of what's happening inside your body.
                
                  The goal is for this process to take no more than 60 seconds.
                
                  You go into the water, you come out of the water, and you're done.
                

                Other than the structure reading like an AI wrote it, the content also reads like someone who believes in homeopathy and invested in Juicero wrote it. Or hyperloop, where a believer could say paraphrase you and say "Conventional [trains] are already cheap. Why can't a [fast train in a vacuum tube] be cheap too?".

                Note this does not mean I think the hardware proposed here is totally impossible*. Sure you could make an ultrasound scanner. Why not? But then, hyperloop was always physically possible, just never turned out to be a good idea to actually build**.

                * That said, I am suspicious about the claim in the video "Each sensor resolves motions smaller than the width of an atom - not micrometers or nanometers but picometers!", which does sound impossible to me given the movement of atoms is the sense field itself, albeit I'm not an expert in this domain and may just be wrong like how there's weird tricks for photolithography smaller than the wavelength of light used.

                ** Back when hyperloop was taken seriously and I was still looking for genius behind things Musk said, I thought hyperloop was an excuse to develop here on Earth a transport system that for a Mars colony made more sense than cars and roads (and indeed I still think that, just there's no evidence Musk ever did).

      • theparanoid 5 hours ago

        The targeted scans and tests that we already do offer surprising little benefit.

        Mammogram screening based on randomized-trial all-cause mortality, has not shown a measurable reduction in total deaths.

        Randomized colonoscopy screening has not shown a statistically significant all-cause mortality reduction.

        • zarzavat 1 hour ago

          > Randomized colonoscopy screening has not shown a statistically significant all-cause mortality reduction.

          My grandfather went to the doctor complaining of chest pains, they gave him a colonoscopy, and he died of a heart attack a week later! Clearly colonoscopy doesn't reduce mortality!

          There's no reason for almost any medical intervention to have a statistically significant effect on all cause mortality. That doesn't mean it doesn't have any effect on mortality of individuals.

      • KingMob 4 hours ago

        It's more statisticians saying this, and not doctors per se. You run into issues of signal detection theory, false positives, and the lay confusion that Bayesian P(A|B) !== P(B|A).

        You're right that we could take steps to fix it, but unfortunately, those steps involve mass education that every human body has anomalies, and many of those should just be ignored.

        We'd get a wave of anxiety, lawsuits, and unnecessary interventions, until humanity collectively internalized this.

        • andreareina 3 hours ago

          It's also doctors. Medlife Crisis on YouTube, Barbell Medicine, others. BBM have an article on priorities for overall health and they link to a tool maintained by one of the professional bodies on what routine screens to have done and it's pretty conservative. Even my doctor on seeing an "abnormal" lab result said it was likely spurious given my lack of complaints and all the rest of the results. That said they still recommended a follow-up because they kind of have to given professional ethics. BBM (again) made a similar point: resistance training is known to cause liver-associated enzymes (AST, ALT, etc) to rise, that doesn't mean you can ignore a high value.

          The steps to fixing it is to not take the test that takes you from a prior of 1/100000 to a posterior of 1/1000, because you're going to ignore it anyway. And you can't depend on multiple testing because those test results can be correlated.

          ETA: I can be convinced that we can collectively get to a place where broader screening would be indicated. But I think it's going to require both of the tests getting better and being better about what we do with (and feel about) the results.

      • camillomiller 4 hours ago

        This Silicon Valley mentality applied to a mechanistic view of the body is a fucking disgrace. This will fail, and luckily we won’t have to endure more of Silicon Valley’s dunning krueger on steroids about medical solutions. The Silicon Valley has NO CLUE of the complexity of clinical science, yet they hold this populistic view that everything can be foxed with tech and nothing stops the hybris. We all can see where that leads

        • nickpp 3 hours ago

          Aren't most of the current/latest advancements in health care coming from tech and software?

    • rlt 5 hours ago

      > every human body is a bit weird and there will almost always be something "wrong" that will be visible in a full body scan

      Would this be solved by routine scans, so you have a baseline you can compare against? Ignore anything slightly odd in the first scan but monitor for changes over time?

      • ufo 4 hours ago

        Wouldn't help much.

        * Some kind of scans, like CT scans, use ionizing radiation and should not be done too often. * Looking at only imaging scans it is often impossible to tell apart a cancer and a benign growth. (More invasive tests would still be required, which was what the parent posters were warning about)

    • risyachka 4 hours ago

      >> It's a controversial and complicated idea

      sure, and there will be downsides.

      But that data will be valuable nonetheless.

    • seer 4 hours ago

      Exactly - I had switched to a one meal per day setup and have been mostly following it for a few years.

      Then after a routine “heart health” check all my indicators were super out of whack - the doctors thought I was on my deathbed - but I am perfectly happy pain free, in shape, physically active person…

      Then _i myself_ had to dig into all these tests and figure out that they were measuring the wrong thing - since they try to time where your body is “just about to eat after a fast” - normally for most people in the morning before breakfast, but since my first meal of the day is usually around 20:00 - my body had adopted to have higher levels of various things just to stay on top of my lifestyle choices.

      Anyway I had to educate some doctors since they haven’t really had a case like mine, so they weren’t thinking critically of how to interpret the results…

      I imagine an automated test _could_ take these things into account with large enough dataset, but it would need to do a lot more reasoning than statistical correlation.

      I do believe current sota models should be good enough to come to the correct conclusions with the right harness though.

      • moffkalast 4 hours ago

        If the current state is anything to go by, an automated test would not only flag your out of distribution results but try to gaslight everyone reading its output with additional false indicators to map you into an area that's in distribution. Statistical models cannot accept the existence of extremely rare edge cases.

        • ACCount37 3 hours ago

          Modern LLMs routinely beat human doctors at diagnosing "extremely rare edge cases".

          They have unmatched breadth of knowledge by default, and can maintain attention across entire medical histories.

          • multjoy 3 hours ago

            Citation very much needed.

          • fn-mote 3 hours ago

            > Modern LLMs routinely beat human doctors at diagnosing "extremely rare edge cases".

            There is a selection bias here. Not saying it wouldn’t work, but right now you hear about exceptional cases, not when the LLM wants to amputate for a wart.

            We all work with LLMs, right? It hasn’t been long at all since an LLM gaslit me while attempting to recover an unbootable laptop. I should have been recommended a few simple steps to try; instead, it was unable to ignore the irrelevant details and led me on an hours-long chase. To me that means the LLM will also struggle to ignore irrelevant medical information.

      • Dathuil 3 hours ago

        Reminds me that a few years ago my wifes grandfather (80+) was wondering if he should cut back on the amount of exercise he was doing. He would regularly be knocking on our door at 6am to see if one of us would want to got for a quick 10k run or to hit the gym.

        He was a firefighter in NY in his youth and had never stopped exercising even after retirement.

        He went to his GP explained his workout routine and was basically told there is no precedent for it as people his age tend to not be running 10km a day. In short he was told if you're not in pain or fatigued keep at it.

        I think he's nearly 90 now and has cut back the running to only a day or so a week, but last time we went to visit he was in his garage bench pressing 50kg

      • powerapple 2 hours ago

        Sorry to branch out: How does this one meal per day work for you? There is recommended calories for a person, do you have to follow it somehow to make sure you have enough energy and exercise?

        • ngc248 1 hour ago

          One meal ... many snacks?

    • vlfig 4 hours ago

      You're absolutely right, and I share the frustration.

      I'm thinking a possible solution to this signal-to-noise problem is to embrace the longitudinal view: instead of comparing each scan with the normal across the population compare only against past self, unless there's a risk factor that warrants it.

      This way we could presumably make use of plentiful scan data and mostly look at the stuff that evolves in suspicious ways, not what looks suspicious.

    • RobotToaster 3 hours ago

      This always feels like a thinly veiled excuse to ration healthcare. Would these same doctors refuse a full body MRI to a billionaire paying out of pocket?

      Anything found can be monitored with focused follow up scans. It doesn't have to be immediately biopsied if it's in a location where that would pose a risk of iatrogenic harm.

      • disgruntledphd2 3 hours ago

        At a population level, this would be both extremely time-consuming, and rather expensive.

        More generally, no test is perfectly accurate, and for low base rate conditions the vast majority of positive tests will be false positives.

        Like, again, as a data person I adore this idea in principle, but there would be a lot of details that we'd need to figure out to make it a reality.

    • newsclues 3 hours ago

      All the reasons you’ve listed are excuses why my government healthcare stopped having annual checkups. But to me it’s just worse quality care

    • rzwitserloot 3 hours ago

      One obvious alternative plan, presupposing that Full Body Scan is dirt cheap, is the following protocol:

      - At 25 years old or whatever you get a FBS. Pretty much no matter what, this FBS will not be used to do more checks, procedures, and so on.

      - ... and now we give you another FBS every so-many years, and only those things that are different from the previous scan are investigated.

      There's still an issue with needless procedures, but the amount of 'weirdness that are not going to cause an actual issue had the patient never been aware' is significantly reduced by looking only at changes. i.e. most 'weirdness' shows up early and is fairly stable.

      The difficulty is the moral issue. You cannot show that first scan to the patient. Even if every soul agrees beforehand that the rule is that nothing on that first scan, no matter how scary it looks, is further investigated... any medical issues raised by patients are used as a major information input for diagnosing issues. If I show a patient a scan that has this tumor looking thing on the left lung, then no doubt a few months later they'll be back complaining about shortness of breath and a pain on the left side of the torso. The mind is a powerful thing. At that point you can do a scan and see... the same nasty tumor looking thing we saw on that first FSB, and we're right back to the issue of these scans doing more harm than good.

      Is it morally acceptable to hide that first scan from the patient?

      • someothherguyy 2 hours ago

        > - ... and now we give you another FBS every so-many years, and only those things that are different from the previous scan are investigated.

        The diff can be meaningless as well. All sorts of benign things develop with age.

        The resolution is the problem. You can't do the type of cytology and histology needed to understand all disease with just scans.

      • chickenman_98 2 hours ago

        I think the issue with this and the proposed ‘spa’ scan model is that the diffs are usually meaningless. We all have cysts, masses, and weird shapes that shift around and show up on imaging. Many of these shapes require biopsy to determine what they are. Without symptoms the false positive rate is ridiculously high.

        Modern medicine sort of requires us to suspend the idea that we can know everything happening in our body at any given time. If we could develop a diagnostic technique to instantly determine if shapes in our bodies are malignant or benign something like frequent full body scans could be interesting, but they really just introduce noise right now.

    • josefrichter 3 hours ago

      Sorry, but that's a morally corrupt idea.

    • davrosthedalek 2 hours ago

      The question is: If you have enough full body scans of many healthy people, and the statistical tools to model it (beyond "this range is OK"), whether this would reduce these false alarms to an acceptable level.

      The real crux of it remains though: Let's say it finds something that increases your death risk by x=0.1%. Could you sleep? I'm not sure. Let's say the operation has 2x=0.2% risk. What do you do? What value of x makes this a problem for you?

  • mrtksn 7 hours ago

    In the rest of the world diagnostics aren’t expensive at all and medical data is centralized already (blood, MRI are almost routine for hospital visits, all data stored in govt systems).

    During Covid it was useful for improving protocols.

  • friendzis 6 hours ago

    There's a ton of variation within medical testing and tons of different conditions affect test results in similar ways. VERY FEW tests (test classes maybe: biopsy, microbiology, skeletal Rö) can yield diagnoses in the first place. Most testing is used to support (not confirm!) and reject possible interpretations.

    This non-invasive everything-scanner sounds more like science fiction.

    • wkoszek 5 hours ago

      Other tests should be solved too (fecal/urine/blood). Perhaps we need more R&D in here to accelerate progress.

      We already have patients trying to track their own health over longer time which is great. We then just have to make AI good enough to spot warning signs (without patients asking). Or parhaps we need to make those tests easy and cheap and regular.

      • friendzis 3 hours ago

        > Perhaps we need more R&D in here to accelerate progress.

        In general yes, just that "more" is monstrously massive to the point of it being closer to science fiction than reality, IMO.

        To reiterate, various assays fluctuate rather wildly over the course of various body cycles. The reason(-s) your doctor should remind to get a blood drawn in the morning after a period of fasting is that the sample is taken at a somewhat steady state and the result is comparable to reference values without too much of a margin.

        Anyone with a requirement to manage blood glucose levels will tell you that CGMs are vastly superior to finger pricks first and foremost due to the sample rate available and comfort reasons secondarily. With a finger prick test the patient is only somewhat aware where in the curve they are, which makes the test only a rough estimate due to this temporal error margin. A lot of people do not zero in their readings with finger pricks as they are mostly interested in the deltas.

        Suppose you manage to make urine sampling relatively accurate and super cheap (e.g. tens of eurodollars per analyzer or cents per test strip) so you can have poorly-supervised, long-term studies with huge cohorts. However, unless you somehow control for sample collection conditions, all this baseline variability suddenly infects your whole dataset and effectively raises noise floor. It's not unreasonable to expect that whatever was found to be a useful signal under controlled conditions to fall below noise floor under uncontrolled conditions.

        That's basically THE problem with the hypothetical test-it-all machine. Again, maybe in some cases that could be extremely useful, but in a lot of cases that would be counter productive. However, what CGMs hint us at is that various kinds of Continuous X Monitors could provide insights into body reactions to things, which is, currently, effectively not a signal in general medicine. Once the test-it-all machine is reframed as an array of continuous monitors and the useful signal is reframed from long-term drifts to short-term deltas it may unlock some additional diagnostic pathways.

  • khutorni 5 hours ago

    > walk up to a machine, breathe into it, spit into it, pee into it, give it a swab

    Maybe take it out to dinner first?

  • EEBio 3 hours ago

    There is this infamous DANCAVAS study [1] in which they ran cardiovascular screening on older population and found absolutely no benefit in doing so. Note that while the linked study claims there was a benefit to screening (reduced mortality in men aged 65-69), the apparent effect was caused by improper statistics (primary endpoint did not show benefit, only subgroup analysis, which however lacked statistical power to be reliable). And indeed, their follow up study showed that there was no benefit in the subgroup. [2]

    Many a dollar is wasted every year on trying to prove population-wide screening prevents mortality or increases patients’ quality of life and every time we don’t cheat with statistics we get the same answer - population-wide screening isn’t effective.

    1: https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2208681 2: https://www.escardio.org/news/press/press-releases/No-signif...

  • RandomLensman 3 hours ago

    What does "solved" mean here? Identifying "the disease" correctly every time? On average identifying the right course of action? For each individual identifying the right course of action? Probabilistically or with certainty?

  • FridgeSeal 48 minutes ago

    > With a big enough data set of [all kinds of bio values, including ones considered irrelevant for that disease] labeled with diagnoses

    > > labeled with diagnoses

    I know you’re not suggesting this is easy, but I can absolutely promise that the land of medical reporting, diagnosis and imagery is about a 1000x more complicated and unhinged than you might expect.

Aurornis 9 hours ago

> enough to give regular, monthly scans to a billion people.

There is a part of me that thinks it would be cool to get cheap full body scans. I like being able to see inside of myself. I can think of a lot of situations where the low-fidelity images coming out of this (they're not good compared to real medical imaging, if you've ever looking at MRI/CT up close) could be useful for coarse analysis of certain conditions that come and go or need to be monitored over long periods of time.

What I don't like is the idea of getting people to do full body scans every month just to be safe. This might sound like a good idea if you haven't looked at the literature on preventative full body imaging. Looking for bad things inside the body sounds like a great idea on the surface.

The problem is that imaging, especially when it's as rough as these ultrasounds, and possibly worse when augmented by AI guessing at what it's seeing, can lead to a lot of unnecessary procedures. The net effect can even become more harmful than the number of real problems it catches. There's a long history of research on this as many companies have tried to commercialize full-body scanning in the past. It frequently leads to situations where there's an unknown or ambiguous spot on the imaging that the person reading the scan can't rule out, which turns into a lot of anxiety and eventually more imaging, biopsies, or unnecessary surgeries. It's easy to think "better safe than sorry" until you realize how often these benign but ambiguous findings show up on full body imaging.

So my initial thoughts on this are that it would be good to make cheap ultrasonic imaging accessible as an as-needed service to use for specific conditions. I do not think it's a good idea to go down the road of trying to scan the entire population once a month and then run it through AI to see if anything pops up. The number of false positives would be overwhelming and lead to a lot of unnecessary procedures to calm the resulting anxieties.

  • Veedrac 9 hours ago

    This style of argument has always bothered me, because the correction to misdiagnosis or mistreatment is not to stop looking, it's _git gud_.

    For sure, we have to be realistic about what processes will systematically have error, and if we can't stop a doctor from doing bad things with a piece of data we should shield them from it, but the tools to make scalable, calibrated risk estimates based on large data dumps is getting better every year.

    • swyx 8 hours ago

      exactly correct. if a bit of knowledge is dangerous, the correct response is not to choose ignorance, it is to get more knowledge about what dangers arise and problemsolve some more there. run it out a few hundred years and it is then no longer dangerous, and strictly better than ignorance.

    • bonsai_spool 8 hours ago

      > it's _git gud_

      There are physical limits to detection and technical parameters that make some situations indeterminate even for the best of the 'gud'. It is frustrating that, hearing an argument from many different individuals over a long time, you assume that each speaker is missing the critical insight that you possess.

      > but the tools to make scalable, calibrated risk estimates based on large data dumps is getting better every year.

      So your suggestion for indeterminate scans is more scans? There is no 'large data dump' personalized to you except for your own imaging.

      > if we can't stop a doctor from doing bad things with a piece of data we should shield them from it

      The doctor isn't the problem, it's the people who would be seeking out monthly imaging without symptoms

      • bastawhiz 8 hours ago

        I go to the doctor every year for a checkup without symptoms. Why a year? Why not every six months? Two weeks? Day?

        If the false positive rate is demonstrably low, I can't see the risk. People who think they need a doctor will go to a doctor with or without a fancy scan. People who want to play armchair physician will play armchair physician with or without a fancy scan.

        • bonsai_spool 8 hours ago

          You can get scans without your normal doctor recommending them. The point is that there is evidence that scans obtained ‘just because’ are harmful as they lead to unnecessary procedures at the population level

          • senordevnyc 8 hours ago

            But does it also catch more issues early?

            • Aurornis 7 hours ago

              Rarely.

              More often it leads to people thinking they have issues when they don't.

              The same thing happens with blood tests: You can order all the blood tests you want if you're willing to pay for them. If you order enough, you will get some that show up as abnormal. You can start spending tens of thousands of dollars ruling things out and never catch any real issues.

        • nemomarx 8 hours ago

          How do you get the false positive rate low? There's a lot of things that look weird on a scan that turn out to be benign. And if you tell patients "well the chance this turns into a serious disease or cancer is low but you can get this optional procedure to fix it now if you want" how many do you think will take them up on it?

          A new chargeable procedure is for for the hospital but maybe not for patients imo.

        • Aurornis 7 hours ago

          > If the false positive rate is demonstrably low, I can't see the risk

          The false positive rate is the entire risk.

          When you go to the doctor for a physical they don't run all of the blood tests they can. They only run them for specific symptoms and for specific preventative measures where we've calculated that the benefits outweigh the risks of a false positive.

          Some tests have been removed from routine exams, or at least discouraged, because they were producing more false positives and harm than what they were saving.

          Full body scans are deep on the end of the spectrum of tests with high false positive rate when ordered without supporting symptoms. That's the risk.

          > People who think they need a doctor will go to a doctor with or without a fancy scan. People who want to play armchair physician will play armchair physician with or without a fancy scan.

          Not really how it works in real life. When you get a full body scan, especially with ultrasound, there are a lot of benign things that can show up that vaguely look like non-benign things. Even if the interpretation is "probably nothing", many people start worrying and think they need to get more tests just to be safe. Even people who don't see themselves as "armchair physician" will start thinking that they should at least rule out the worst case because they wouldn't want to die of cancer having known that something might have been there.

        • jibal 6 hours ago

          > If the false positive rate is demonstrably low

          Regardless of how accurate a test is, by Bayes Theorem if it's done on enough healthy people the false positives will swamp the true positives.

        • grey-area 6 hours ago

          Why do you do it at all?

          Many countries with far better outcomes don’t do this, is it necessary, or is it just the product of an insurance-driven health industry which prioritises interventions over health?

      • Veedrac 8 hours ago

        I have libertarian enough tendencies to think that if a person wants to self-operate, or pay for an operation that doctors are telling them is not justified given the evidence, then they should have right to do it. But I don't think that's what people normally mean when they say that eager screening causes harmful overdiagnosis.

        > So your suggestion for indeterminate scans is more scans?

        The solution to imperfect evidence is consistent and calibrated risk estimation of both disease and intervention.

        • bonsai_spool 8 hours ago

          The risk estimation is why people aren’t recommended to get scans! There are studies on ‘VIPs’ who get ‘executive MRIs’ and wind up getting treated for things that would never have justified intervention.

          • goda90 8 hours ago

            That sounds more like a capitalism issue, to be honest. Treatment = revenue, so of course there will be unscrupulous individuals who will bend their oath and let patient anxiety drive care.

            The trick seems like it would be to strongly incentivize waiting and watching any symptomless anomalies if further investigation is invasive. If you're getting 60 second scans every month then something growing will be catchable and something static or that disappears can be ignored until the next scan.

          • mhb 7 hours ago

            Isn't the way we decide what justifies intervention by comparing observational data, action and outcomes? Currently our observations are limited by many things including the cost and side effects. More frequent or better observations will improve the assessment of what justifies interventions.

      • mhl47 7 hours ago

        Maybe there is a bias for action within our moral and legal system. Fundamentally if you can deal with uncertainty correctly or "perfectly" wouldn't more information always be better?

    • jjmarr 8 hours ago

      That's not how the legal system works, though.

      If Midjourney says "maybe you have cancer" but your doctor doesn't take it seriously, you might sue if you do end up with cancer. You might even win, regardless of whether "wait and see" was the right approach.

      Meanwhile, if your doctor gives you an unnecessary CT scan that rules out cancer, hospital both earns $$$ and the doctor doesn't face legal consequences. Your increased chance of cancer risk from the radiation isn't something you can realistically sue over.

      • Veedrac 8 hours ago

        This is fair, but I think it's better stated as you did than couched in language suggesting it's a matter of principle.

    • raincole 7 hours ago

      No one is saying that we should stop looking. Especially not the commenter you replied to. They're saying the tech Midjourney presented isn't _gud_ enough to justify frequent scanning.

    • Marha01 7 hours ago

      > This style of argument has always bothered me, because the correction to misdiagnosis or mistreatment is not to stop looking, it's _git gud_.

      Exactly this. I mean, even if the scan is really indeterminate, at a minimum you can simply wait, then scan again. If it's truly something serious, it will become determinate at some point. Doing this is still better than nothing and carries no risks of unnecessary procedures.

    • cryber 1 hour ago

      Consider the null space of diagnostic markers, say, the precise shape of a tissue boundary used in early cancer diagnoses that comes out blurry in an imaging system every time. More scans with the same null space will not resolve the null space.

  • mcphage 8 hours ago

    > The number of false positives would be overwhelming and lead to a lot of unnecessary procedures to calm the resulting anxieties.

    If the scans are cheap and fast enough, the solution is to not do anything until you’ve observed the mass in question grow over time, not just be there.

    • Marha01 5 hours ago

      This. The solution to all these "but what about spurious results" arguments is pretty obvious: Wait for some time, scan again, compare the results. We currently can't do this only because the required frequent scans are not cheap enough to do it en masse, so the scanning demands for masses of spurious results would overwhelm the system. Once cheap scanning (and actually good AI interpretation) becomes ubiquitous, this ceases to be an issue.

  • toasty228 1 hour ago

    I love how people wait for some kind of technological God or magic silver bullet to """cure""" them, but when it comes to eating clean, exercising, not sitting 8 hours in front of a fucking screen every single day, getting good sleep, and all the other low hanging fruits you can act on right now, it's radio silence even though it would solves the majority of health issues

haldujai 6 hours ago

This is ridiculously optimistic. The technology, USCT with full waveform inversion, is not new.

It’s already used in breast imaging (SoftVue) and hasn’t replace mammography. A body part ideally suited for ultrasound.

More compute many minimize some of the fundamental limits of sound waves (bone and gas) but I would be shocked if they have useful images of 90% of the body parts we image with CT or MRI and even beyond that I question how much it’s more useful than B-mode anyway.

Quite slow which means most things abdomen and chest will be motion degraded.

This may be useful in superficial areas but then why do whole body anyway. Might be some new niches and interesting research but hardly revolutionary in my opinion.

  • intoXbox 5 hours ago

    Exactly, try can get a very limited FOV which is probably why they showcased it on arms/legs first

sberens 9 hours ago

I don't understand how people can hate on this. It's probably the most novel & ambitious consumer health device ever? Plus they're doing it fully bootstrapped. Let them cook!

  • moralestapia 9 hours ago

    Totally agree.

    This community can be much better than that.

  • jordanb 8 hours ago

    It seems like the radiology equivalent to a blood testing machine that could be deployed to walgreens and detect 100 diseases with a finger prick.

    • codekansas 8 hours ago

      But they're bootstrapped and using their own money, not defrauding investors

    • noduerme 8 hours ago

      True, but on the other hand they have an actual prototype and they don't seem to be going around charming VCs... also, I didn't see anywhere they claimed to be able to diagnose or discover any disease.

      So as opposed to bilking the ultra-wealthy to invest in a bunk idea, at worst this seems to be enticing them to pay for an at-worst expensive and possibly useless service. On that scale, it's downright ethical.

  • wyrdcurt 8 hours ago

    In my opinion the issue is that many (maybe most) people who've heard of Midjourney associate the brand with AI slop imagery. Whether that reputation is fair or not is beside the point.

  • 152334H 8 hours ago

    what's the novelty? mixing healthcare together with a spa is an idea older than Christ. USCT is decades old.

    Their butterfly chips might be cool, but it's not like the article says anything about that. There's only one other comment in the whole thread that even mentions it.

    • gpt5 8 hours ago

      I find using tens of thousands of ultrasonic chips, submerged underwater to provide you a radiation free full body scan, all while processing a petabyte of data per scan a pretty ambitious and cool project. I hope they make it work.

      • drum55 7 hours ago

        1 petabyte per 60 second scans implies a kind of comical data rate to storage, even at RAM speeds that’s implausible. Imagine we need to write these to hard drives, they happily sustain 150Mb/s on the high end, which would imply you’d need 115,000 hard drives to absorb that amount of writes. Even with top end NVMe drives you’d need a thousand of them writing simultaneously.

        • ipsum2 7 hours ago

          There's probably compute done on ram to reduce the file size before it hits disk. Definitely going to be redundant information in the scan.

        • KeplerBoy 4 hours ago

          That's likely the datarate of the ADC chips. You would downsample them directly on the FPGA board and maybe perform an FFT or similar transform. 16 TB/s across a few dozen FPGA boards is nothing crazy. After some early stages in the signal processing you might transfer 1 or 2 TB/s over ethernet to the servers. Entirely feasible considering we have 800 gigabit/s ethernet.

  • natsucks 8 hours ago

    Not hating, but there's no way resolution gets as good as MRI with ultrasound computed tomography (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultrasound_computer_tomography). Doing something like searching for room-temperature semiconductors so that MRI scanners are much cheaper to operate would be a more worthy goal.

    • gpt5 8 hours ago

      There are many labs searching for room-temp superconductors. It's a research area with unknown results.

      This project seems doable (just with a ton of data). Not sure about MRI level resolution, but CT is definitely not MRI level resolution but still extremely useful.

  • Aeolun 7 hours ago

    I think I hate any single product announcement that involves "We have nothing, but we'll have something next year, and then we'll have 50k locations worldwide just two years later!"

  • Kristencline 4 hours ago

    Ultrasonic imaging is definitely not novel. And it requires you tolerate being fully submerged. And all you get is an image that is the SAME quality as an MRI. Except now you are soaking wet.

    As a consumer health device, we haven't even gotten the population at large to wear biometrics and the CGM fad is over. Full body scans that cannot be used by a physician are not generally useful. If they aren't targeting FDA approval right off the bat, they are wasting their time. This is not solving any current problem in healthcare- you can get an MRI for $2K cash out of pocket and you get to keep your clothes dry

    • einpoklum 4 hours ago

      > Except now you are soaking wet.

      Oh no, how terrible! I have to use a towel and dry out like when taking a bath or shower...

      Now, I have no idea whether this promotional video has any substance behind it, or whether 3D-reconstructed ultrasonic scans are usable by physicians right now. But, come on, your complaint is about getting wet?

  • toasty228 1 hour ago

    How old are you? I've been conned all my life by tech companies selling us "deliverance from work", "permanent Mars bases", "asteroid mining", "AR/VR everywhere, for everyone, all the time", "crypto will replace money", "3d TVs are the new hot shit", "self driving cars for everyone in 2 years tops"

    I don't understand how people are so gullible? How do they keep falling for it?

maz1b 9 hours ago

I had to check the date after seeing the headline, and again after opening the page. Thought it was April Fools.

Regardless, as a doctor and full stack engineer, I'm looking forward to learning more about their methodologies, their approaches, but I don't think this is going to be displacing MRIs or remotely close, based off the cursory initial glance. If their vision is to be able to provide end users with more actionable data with some kind of "low fidelity" medical imaging data that is somewhere above zero and or standard imaging and high fidelity modalities like CT/MRI, then this could be somewhat interesting.

Not a radiologist and not medical advice. Just my two cents.

  • Nikhil37475 9 hours ago

    Fair point. Definitely not a replacement; it’s meant to bridge the data gap.

  • doctorpangloss 9 hours ago

    Honestly if these bozos can't even write one first sentence that says what the FUCK this is, they have no hope for commercialization.

    • maz1b 8 hours ago

      This made me spit my coffee out! Thanks for helping me start my day with a laugh. No comment otherwise :-P

    • reverius42 8 hours ago

      I read the site and it seemed pretty clear? It's a 3d, transparent, high res image of your whole body reconstructed from the wave data from a large number of high frequency ultrasound scans. But it's also a high end spa in San Francisco that softly scans your body. Then, you uh, do as you want with the data (presumably show it to your doctor, who will be perhaps bemused)?

    • Jtsummers 8 hours ago

      > they have no hope for commercialization.

      Remember, commercialization isn't the goal. They don't need to make a profit, as a company, they just need to get people to invest in their company and not get charged with fraud for something along the way.

      • CityOfThrowaway 8 hours ago

        This particular company is literally bootstrapped and makes hundreds of millions of dollars profitably

  • 999900000999 9 hours ago

    Is the idea to use AI magic to detect cancer and other bad things?

    I could imagine this getting cheap enough that your local gym has one and you get checked once every 3 months.

    Curing cancer is one of the only things I’d take a pay cut to do.

    • arcticbull 9 hours ago

      Bayes theorem mostly. False positives rates are extremely important. I mean so are false negatives. So just, like, accuracy.

      • dualvariable 9 hours ago

        Timing is also important. I can predict cancer with 100% success, because everyone will get cancer, unless they die of something else first.

      • SpicyLemonZest 8 hours ago

        False positive rates are extremely important in the medical system as it exists today, where most scans will come without a known baseline and doctors cannot prescribe "biweekly scans for the next 6 weeks to see what changes". If we can achieve the kind of imaging abundance they're imagining (which I don't know how to evaluate based on their short post), I think false positives become much less of an issue, at least in the context of cancer where malignancy is the only problem.

        • arcticbull 8 hours ago

          False positives are important because of Bayes theorem. Even a test that’s 99% sensitive in a high incidence population can be indistinguishable from noise in a low incidence population.

          If it has a 1% false positive rate but the incidence is 1%, the vast majority of the positives are false. Then you have to deal with the consequences, including invasive procedures for further diagnosis.

          If you’re searching for tens or hundreds of low incidence conditions in the general population at a time it’s absolutely worthless because basically every positive is a false positive. At that point save the scan fee, spin a wheel of body parts and go get a biopsy of that.

          This is why doctors are confused why companies are offering periodic full body scans in normal people. They only test people who are high risk or symptomatic to confirm a suspected diagnosis. That extra signal is what makes the test useful.

          Go down to the medical diagnosis section for a worked example.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bayes'_theorem

          Regarding cancers every human has all sorts of weird lumps that are generally meaningless.

          In order for this to not be a boondoggle it would have to be spectacularly accurate to a degree previously unheard of. Just from a statistics perspective.

          • SpicyLemonZest 8 hours ago

            As a person experiencing UV sensitive skin, I’ve had multiple wheel-spin biopsies which turned out benign as expected, and at least once a year I find a weird looking spot I have take pictures of and promise to monitor for a bit. I don’t think there’s any reason this kind of stuff couldn’t be extended to other cancers if non-invasive next steps were available.

            • arcticbull 8 hours ago

              If you’re UV sensitive and at a higher risk then you’re already in a high incidence population making the tests valuable statistically speaking. That test is wildly more accurate for you than it would be for me, and even still you’ve been the unfortunate recipient of many false positives. There’s no reason for me or most people to do that since practically 99% or more of the positive tests would be wrong.

              Biopsies are expensive, waste time, hospital resources and carry risks of infection and scarring that do not net out positively for people who aren’t in your risk group.

              Getting a totally random positive doesn’t put you into a higher incidence category so whatever follow up test you take will be just as inaccurate as the first one.

              The reason to avoid them is the tests would be a waste of time, statistically, and expose you to a bad risk-reward profile.

              If you knew apriori 99% of the positive tests are false positive why are you taking the test?

              It’s literally just math. Sometimes the right thing for you on average is to do nothing, which feels bad, but it’s still the right thing to do.

          • ajmurmann 7 hours ago

            As we gain more data, might we be able to find patterns in that data that we now cannot see? I'm not only thinking of these regular scans but combining it with other data sources, like maybe regular, more complete blood panels, Apple Watch data, whatever we can get our hands on. Maybe we can find data points that together have a lower false-positive rate, like lump plus increased nightly body temperature plus weight loss.

    • nxobject 9 hours ago

      > Curing cancer is one of the only things I’d take a pay cut to do.

      Send an email to this head-and-neck oncologist's lab. I saw a talk he gave at a Chicago-area national lab on open-source models for identifying malignancies in scanned pathology slides, and was smitten.

      https://voices.uchicago.edu/pearsonlab/

Jabrov 9 hours ago

They've lost the plot, especially with the spa. And a billion scans a month is absurd.

Is this some AI hallucination post?

  • 1attice 7 hours ago

    The spa is brilliant. Think of corporate rec days that also cut insurance costs. Good lord, its like you're new to hypercapitalism :)

  • mrandish 7 hours ago

    > They've lost the plot, especially with the spa.

    Yeah, that's not just 'cart before the horse', it's more like cart before the wheel. They make a bunch of extraordinary claims yet offer zero evidence, info or even a plausible hypothesis on how those claims might be possible at the scale, timeframe (2027) and unit economics implied. Thank goodness they really thought through the accent lighting for a calming user experience though. Otherwise, I might have been concerned they're not serious. </s>

    • Jtsummers 7 hours ago

      But they have a picture showing a higher resolution Ultrasound CT result than a 1978 MRI! Surely that's important and useful information by which we can judge their product.

      https://cdn.midjourney.com/static/medical/media/first_mri_vs...

      From: https://www.midjourney.com/medical/scan_gallery

      • mrandish 6 hours ago

        I did see that. And it does look better. Okay, I'm sold! Sign me up for my spa visit including avocado facial peel, genital waxing and computed axial tomography ultrasound.

        More seriously, I assumed that CT Ultrasound image is from Butterfly's actual FDA-approved handheld medical device, not the Midjourney 360 submerged ring - as there's no evidence that is working. Since the Midjourney site has no helpful information, I just asked a friendly AI to do a comparison of what's actually proven to work in the Butterfly chip which Midjourney licensed and this 360 degree, full body, submerged concept - and essentially what's not been proven to work are those three differences: 360 degree ring of 40 butterfly chips, full body at once (requiring solving distance and speed challenges as well as a massive signal processing problem to extract and denoise signal), and doing it submerged.

  • pleurotus 5 hours ago

    I've been sitting here trying to do sleepy morning train commute maths. 1billion scans per month, 50,000 scanners worldwide (!). 1 minute scan time. Lowers platform at 5cm/cm. FTA. Globally, apparently in 2023 there were 250,000 spas worldwide. [0]

    Their numbers would suggest these 1 billion people, getting scanned by 50k scanners, have each scanner doing 20k scans a month. 31 days, 24 hours, we have 744 hours in which to do these. That's 20k scans/744 hours, giving you 26.8 scans/hour. One scan'll be 2.2min. 2 minutes 14 seconds.

    If this machine is 200cm big, lowers at 5cm a sec, that gives you 40seconds to lower. One minute to scan. 40 seconds to get you back up, presumably. Even if we're generous and double that, you're at 2 minutes just to lower, scan, and yeet you back up.

    Giving you 14 seconds between scans. To clean, maintain, etc. Seems like this machine will output investor AI hype, bacteria, and false positives.

    I linked the spa statistics because there's the question of how they'll even get the room for these machines but whatever.

    0-https://gitnux.org/spa-industry-statistics/

handwoven 8 hours ago

Gives me the strange impression of a product that was vibe-brainstormed, vibe-engineered, and vibe-announced.

  • handwoven 8 hours ago

    I can only imagine the swarm of AI agents constantly feeding into this project at different levels of product development and even management. (To be fair, if it works out, it might become a template for future "AI-led organizations")

  • zippyman55 6 hours ago

    Now society needs to vibe invest!

shireboy 1 hour ago

I have thought that extremely accessible, portable, non-radiation imaging would be revolutionary. Imagine every doctor - or even every person - had a handheld thing they could wave over your affected area to get a high res 3d image of the issue. Of course we have mri, xray, and ultrasound, but those are big and expensive. Obviously there are engineering reasons that is the case, but It seems like a concerted effort to make imaging more portable and accessible, coupled with ai to help analyze could bring about all sorts of follow-on health improvements. Your regular practitioner could check you for heart blockages, clots that lead to stroke, cancers etc as a matter of course. I’m not sure stepping into a golden vat of water is what I have in mind but medical imaging does seem like a possible area for drastic innovation.

  • UltraSane 1 hour ago

    Actually doctors tend to frown on people getting full body MRI scans with no symptoms because they tend to cause many false positives.These false positives often trigger a stressful cascade of unnecessary follow-up imaging, bloodwork, and invasive biopsies.

armcat 6 hours ago

Neko Health has been doing this now for a few years. What I heard is that ultimately it doesn’t solve much (other than them privately collecting all your data) because there are lot of false positives and these false positives are deferred to the general healthcare system, which is a major bottleneck.

arrel 6 hours ago

This is an ambitious idea, but it’s pretty misleading to lump MRI, CT, and ultrasound into a single “body scan” category. They do different things and explicitly do not serve as replacements for each other.

Inventing new, affordable early detection devices is incredible, but being so misleading in their positioning is going to kill long-term trust in this and other new scanning tech.

amirhirsch 9 hours ago

There are 100M pregnant women right now. If it works for just for the vanity use of seeing your baby grow (forget the medical imaging aspect) and can be as casual and relaxing experience as they put forward, then I can see such a spa being wildly successful.

  • yalok 9 hours ago

    is ultrasonic scanning completely harmless for developing baby? when my wife was pregnant, I remember they wouldn't recommend too frequent ultrasonic scans...

    • twostorytower 7 hours ago

      They don’t recommend them overly frequently because it’s unnecessary, but it’s not harmful to mom or the baby in any way.

    • amirhirsch 7 hours ago

      Ultrasound is totally harmless, but doctors recommend ALARA ("as low as reasonably achievable"). Average baby is exposed to 50 - 90 minutes of ultrasound over three visits, though we had to go more frequently for scans for all three of my kids. This would be 36 minutes if you went in every week. If it was possible to get medical quality anatomy scans and avoid transvaginal scans (either because of the tech or simply just going reguarly enough to catch all the imaging you need) then it would win the entire US market for sure: roughly $3-7B for the ultrasounds (3.5M US births at $1-2k per for ultrasounds). also it's a spa -- prenatal wellness spend in the US estimate at $5-7B.

Brosper 10 minutes ago

They will do everything but not release the API

cglan 10 hours ago

First of all, this is incredible. Like genuinely insane. Also I bet you can do crazy things with that tranducer. If stuff like this keeps coming out, we have nowhere near enough compute

otaviogood 5 hours ago

FWIW, I tried the prototype. It's very real. I scanned my hand and arm. It showed realtime images of slices of my hand as I dipped my hand in the water. Really amazing IMO. I think this will be a game changer when it comes out. It's just so easy to scan yourself.

  • shimon 4 hours ago

    Did you get any interpretation of the imaging? It sounds cool (I'd take an ultrasound selfie) but it has to be medically useful for something before enough doctors grade enough images to kickstart the data collection for diagnosing more.

teekert 5 hours ago

A problem with large scale "screening" is the explosion of false positives (even at very high specificity) and the follow-ups that those generate will overwhelm our current healthcare systems.

So any machine that does something medical must address this. Either that, or don't be medical. But then you might just as well tell people: "Move around a bit more. Talk to other people. Eat real food, not too much, mostly plants."

But we are always attracted to solutions that fix us in easy ways. The problem is that the issues are often with our behaviours, and those are hard to change. Or perhaps we are finding easy ways now with GLP-1 agonists and our future health and happiness is in drugs... But then why do we need this machine...

  • wkoszek 5 hours ago

    If we scan patient every 6mo starting from age 18 lets say, you could identify the masses in the patient body and track what stays the same, whats growing etc.

    • teekert 5 hours ago

      But what if most "masses" are cysts or other harmless structures that form during the 80 years we're walking around? I think that after about their 3rd useless biopsy people start to feel the problem with this.

      Of course we can keep tuning and tuning the models, but in the limit it may well make more sense to wait for symptoms. At least that is the current experience.

      Now maybe this machine will make sense in screening age 55+, 20 year+, 2 pack+ smokers for Lung lesions (where a much large portion of detected lesions are true positives). We do this currently with CT and this may be better or cheaper. But it doesn't look like it is, and it looks like far (very far) lower res than MRI (often the follow-up of a CT-scan).

tfirst 9 hours ago

It's obvious why they're doing this: there's a lot of money in healthcare.

What there isn't is good evidence that these full body scans actually improve outcomes.

  • nxobject 9 hours ago

    Which is why I pause when they say they're not looking for investor money – in medicine you'd at least have to phrase things in terms of "what already exists, and what's our contribution"? From that lens, I'm not sure what they're trying to contribute: instead of increasing the predictive value of full-body imaging, they're just making it cheaper?

atkrista 6 hours ago

Companies are awfully confident of advertising "revolutionary" ideas that don't even have a testable prototype. I too have a dream of world peace and eternal human prosperity that I would like to sell. Any interested investors?

  • n2h4 4 hours ago

    Only if there's AI involved in some form.

AbstractH24 1 hour ago

April fools 2027 is gonna be nuts

We live in an era where the daily news stories are so crazy topping them is going to take some creativity

themantalope 9 hours ago

radiologist here - example images don't look great

  • bhouston 9 hours ago

    But isn’t this much cheaper and easier so even if they are not quite a good, the accessibility and ease and thus much more data is better?

    • themantalope 9 hours ago

      Other than the shapes of the tissues in the images, there is no anatomic detail. Wouldn't be useful for diagnostics. It's substantially worse than conventional ultrasound.

      • throwaway219450 9 hours ago

        Would it be suitable for basic body composition (as they claim in TFA)? DEXA is a big business and companies push a subscription model where they encourage you to get monthly scans. The results are really fun to look at and the dose is admittedly very low, but you're still getting rastered by an x-ray. It would also explain the spa angle and hence why they're doing that before going for regulation.

        > We’re starting by just giving you detailed body composition maps — and we’ll be submitting regular test results to the FDA for increased capabilities.

        As far as I understand ultrasound there's no reason you couldn't do this, it's just infeasible to do a full body scan with a hand probe and you get covered in goop.

        https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3770049/

    • rflrob 9 hours ago

      More data sounds better, but especially in a medical context, you have to be careful, because false positives have consequences. The PSA test is no longer broadly recommended for prostate cancer screening [1]. What harm could it do, you know more about your body, even if it's a noisy predictor? Most prostate cancer is slow growing, and something that men "die with" rather than "die of", so treatment can make for worse outcomes, without clear benefit.

      It's not clear that we have the health infrastructure in place to know what to do with frequent, low resolution, whole body scans of the human body. How often do anomalies show up and then go away? How often are anomalies purely a scanning/data processing artifact? Who reads the scans and makes recommendations about follow-ups, if any? I think this is the kind of thing that sounds exciting and with low direct risk, but with all kinds of questions that are not only unanswered, but apparently unconsidered.

      [1] https://www.cancer.gov/types/prostate/psa-fact-sheet

      • totetsu 8 hours ago

        Yes. I spent a bunch of money on many of the optional extra imagining scans on my last health check up only to realize this afterwards. Humans have survived this far without this data. It would be better to spend resources on preventative things or lifestyle things known to promote health, than to obsess over seeing whats going on inside.

      • runako 7 hours ago

        > It's not clear that we have the health infrastructure in place to know what to do with frequent, low resolution, whole body scans of the human body.

        This is exactly my thinking. There are decades of longitudinal studies behind the recommendations physicians make based on given levels of e.g. cholesterol in a standard blood test. And critically, those depend on standard protocols around administering and testing samples.

        This would be brand new and would not have any of that infrastructure. Which all tech starts at, good. But I would expect Midjourney to need to dig in for a few decades to get and analyze clinical results and outcomes.

        For body scans, I think about how few people would know if they have e.g. three kidneys (or other distortion), and how that impacts/doesn't impact their health.

        Most people do not undergo autopsy after death, so it's possible there are correlates between good/bad health outcomes that frequent scanning would eventually reveal. But it would take significant time for this to be apparent.

  • jawns 9 hours ago

    I'm scratching my head about why they would venture into an entirely different field like this, one with tremendous regulatory hurdles, if they know (and surely they must know) that radiologists are going to pan the results.

    It's like if LeBron announced he was switching to bowling and was going to revolutionize the sport, then rolled a gutter ball.

    • themantalope 9 hours ago

      Not sure. Image reconstruction/generation is a computationally intensive process, and in recent years DL based methods for improve image reconstruction have advanced fields like musculoskeletal MRI imaging. The physics behind this idea are interesting, but will have to wait to see if they produce images with high anatomic detail.

    • oliyoung 9 hours ago

      > I'm scratching my head about why they would venture into an entirely different field like this

      Never underestimate the audacity of a software engineer with a new toy

      > It's like if LeBron announced he was switching to bowling and was going to revolutionize the sport, then rolled a gutter ball.

      Well, if you replace LeBron with Jordan, and Bowling with Baseball ..

      • amirhirsch 7 hours ago

        The founder of midjourney is not a software engineer.

    • bandrami 9 hours ago

      I mean, Michael Jordan did play for the White Sox for a hot second

    • dyauspitr 9 hours ago

      It’s because no one has heard from mid journey in a few years so they’re pivoting

    • mrwaffle 9 hours ago

      I'm pretty sure, like most things, it's better to wait and see what's built rather than take issue with their short marketing video.

  • ranger_danger 9 hours ago

    Besides the high probably that those images are fake, and probably this entire device is fake... if it were real then it would mean what they're showing in those images is not even close to an approximation of what the actual data could show you if they put more effort into volume rendering of 3D data (not unlike Voreen).

    The resolution of typical DICOM images is much less than what they're saying they are actually capturing, so the reconstructed images they're showing are just terrible for no good reason.

    But I suspect there is a bigger fundamental physics issue with this entire thing... I'm not convinced they can penetrate fully inside and all the way around a human with only non-ionizing energy, especially from that far away.

  • swyx 8 hours ago

    can you say more? dont look great compared to current radiology, sure, but you see no potential in ultrasound diagnosis whatsoever? would it improving 10% change your mind? 10x? what's a good way to think about what "looks good" looks like?

    • davidivadavid 8 hours ago

      That's basically the only thing I'm interested in reading about this. Based on my complete lack of radiology knowledge, I'd say the images look... a bit blurry or something? So, what would be an example of something this would not allow a radiologist/doctor to see?

      Without those kinds of details, radiologists just expose themselves to: oh so you're telling me this doesn't work as well as the machines you paid ~millions of dollars for and are currently charging your clients a lot to use? Mmm I wonder why.

  • gertlex 7 hours ago

    Instead of the value of evaluating a single scan, what about determinations made from evaluating regular deltas between images?

    As a layperson, I'm mostly familiar with the concept of "get scanned, and a professional evaluates it"... are there scenarios where the approach of "imaging every few weeks, to make decisions based on trends" is currently done?

    (From reading other comment threads here, I suspect the general answer is: other body-scanning startups have proposed the same thing, and it hasn't made sense)

    As an aside, I could probably benefit from allergy shots, but the idea of having a regularly scheduled errand to do during the workweek is pretty unappealing, so I never seriously consider it.

schmorptron 5 hours ago

I'm giving them the benefit of the doubt and interpreting it in a charitable way because they sound earnest about it, this is incredibly ambitious and cool-sounding, and I wish them all the best. It's something that's some sort of pipe dream, a noninvasive diagnosis machine that is able to use certain generic measurements and then derive insane levels of data from it. We've of course seen Theranos, but the holy grail remains.

Of course, there's always the tradeoff between research data collection and access vs user privacy, and striking that balance is incredibly hard. To make anything like this even remotely feasible you'll need a shitton of data and have it fully available to your researchers as well, while somehow safeguarding individual users. anonymizing medical data is impossible without rendering it near useless. Hoping they can figure that out! (Also, with human bodies being so different from one another, combatting bias is probably an eternal challenge)

lifeisstillgood 4 hours ago

In the early years of X-rays, doctors found all sorts of patients with major organ displacement, and performed surgery to, for example, hold the liver or kidneys “up”.

It took a while to realise that textbooks since Leonardos time had drawn and based anatomy on (dead) patients lying on a slab. But X-rays were taken with (alive) patients standing up. So of course there was a lot of “your kidney has slipped!”

I fully support and applaud this kind of medical innovation (even if … why midjourney?) but we need to be careful of the medical term VOMIT (victim of modern imaging technology). At some point we need a human doctor to say “calm down, live your life, eat right, exercise right, and accept that somethings don’t need to be panicked over yet - come back in six months”

nirui 5 hours ago

I watched the video first without reading the text and thought, wow, Midjourney has gotten really good, they generated debris in the water exactly like what would happen in real life if the water is reused enough.

Then I started reading the text, and realize it's not an ad for their video generating tool? Cool if each of it can do ~120000 scans per-month. But if I have to step in to a tank filled with debris and discharges from ~3,999 other people (assuming the machine is maintained daily), I think I might have to wear protection and you must not lower me beyond my mouth.

But, if the claim is real, then yea, it could really help. So many health problems can be discovered early with ultrasound scan, only if it can be made easy, cheap and fast. Not sure about resolution and other specs, if it can be as good as CT, then more lives can be saved.

  • someothherguyy 2 hours ago

    water filtration seems like the easy part

    • laserbeam 1 hour ago

      No, water filtration sounds like the first part the device will cheap out on to cut costs.

block_dagger 9 hours ago

I watched the whole video thinking it was generated by Midjourney, the product, and that the announcement was related to fidelity in images/video around human anatomy. This seems like a very strange pivot for them indeed.

  • Cyclone_ 8 hours ago

    To me it reeks of desperation.

noobermin 9 hours ago

Clearly something like this would need to be approved by the FDA, it is literally irresponsible to promote something like this as being more powerful than a MRI.

  • ccheney 9 hours ago

    Are you implying soundwaves are dangerous?

    • noobermin 9 hours ago

      You shouldn't promote something like this as being useful for medical purposes, because some patients might think this is real and start sending their doctors these "scans" or even worse, some shitty doctors will use them to diagnose tumours in their patients so they can then make banger bucks out of their new hallucinated cancer patients.

      Stuff like this needs to go through approvals for obvious reasons before they can advertise them for having medical purposes.

    • atq2119 6 hours ago

      That was probably not GP's point, but they can be. Sound-based weapons are a thing: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long-range_acoustic_device

      Of course a lot of it is about the energy and overall exposure, and the harms of this, if any, are more likely elsewhere, but it's completely reasonable to question extraordinary promises made by people who up to this point have shown no expertise in the field.

      I swear, it's like some people have already forgotten about Theranos.

      • ninjalanternshk 1 hour ago

        The sci-fi writes itself. Someone hacks the spa’s schedule to find out when you’re getting your scan done, then hacks the machine to push the output to 11 when you’re in, and liquifies your insides.

        The first Midjourney Medical murder.

    • cootsnuck 6 hours ago

      "Dangerous" is a loaded term. But yes, even "soundwaves" can cause harm, same way use of pharmacological medical interventions can cause harm. Dosage, application methods, side effects, etc. all exist for medical use of ultrasound too. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8954895

    • dwroberts 2 hours ago

      Focused ultrasound is already used as an actual surgery method and they have to carefully balance the parameters so it does not produce heating and damage [unrelated] tissue. Obviously a scanner would not aim for the same power/effects but it is possible to cause harm, yes

teiferer 6 hours ago

> But suddenly, you have a huge library of data about your health.

With "you" being a VC backed startup aiming for the next $1T IPO. What could possibly go wrong?

  • moozilla 6 hours ago

    Midjourney is not VC backed. They have a bit about this in the article:

    > As a reminder, Midjourney has no investors. We are a totally new kind of research lab. We've seen academic, corporate, and government labs - but we are a distinct (and curious) new thing: we are a community-backed research lab.

    • teiferer 5 hours ago

      Yeah sure. That's not going to be a sustainable model. Once the tech is available and money is to be made, lots of for-profit alternatives will appear with marketing and lobby budgets that will take over the market.

      Remember Open AI was a non-profit at some point. Look at how that turned out.

chhxdjsj 8 hours ago

Looks like an array of ultrasound probes which is fine.. how does this deal with bone obstructing windows? the example with an abdo is feasible and fine but you cant do that with brain or easily with heart /lungs

laserbeam 3 hours ago

Massive Theranos vibes.

You don't market medical imagery to the regular public and build a random wellness spa and talk about "shallow pools of golden light" if it actually works well. You write academic papers and sell to hospitals.

The tech may be good, but if you want me to trust you you shouldn't do what every snake oil salesman does.

Ono-Sendai 2 hours ago

Wonderful stuff, good job Midjourney.

An AI can be trained on body scans to detect diseases, tumours etc. Ideally this can be trained on real scans with real diseases but you could also train on synthetic data (synthetic bodies and/or synthetic diseases).

You can also focus ultrasonic waves to destroy (vaporise or cook) diseased tissue.

inasio 6 hours ago

I've worked optimizing MRIs trying to make them faster and more accurate, they're amazing machines (distinguish white matter from grey matter in the brain is very non trivial), but super complicated and expensive. To me, the paradigm change that could come from greater accessibility and throughput to analyze all that data would be having longitudinal baselines (scans every x months), which right now only very few people can access, and for the same reason there's not a lot of data to build accurate models.

captainbland 7 hours ago

I think it's a bit odd to compare this to an MRI. The physics are totally different and there are things it fundamentally won't image in the same way because it's basically just ultrasound.

The approach sounds like something which appears in a few research articles from the 2010s (ultrasound computed tomography), although submersion to make the ultrasound transmission more efficient seems novel.

It's possible the "spa" approach is used because it's hard to achieve the level of cleanliness required in a typical health facility using a shared bath.

  • ninjalanternshk 1 hour ago

    The spa approach also achieves what’s probably the key ingredient to making this useful medically — consistent data over time. We know the “what’s this fuzzy bit!?!” hysteria with elective scans can be counterproductive, but if you truly had monthly scans going back 2 years, the fuzzy bit could in fact mean something.

verandaguy 10 hours ago

I'm sorry, a billion full-body scans a month?

For what possible reasons? Are people going to be doing these things recreationally? Cause otherwise you're talking about scanning the entire world's population, including the very young, the very old, the mobility-impaired, and those without easy access to US-based facilities (i.e.... people who are part of the small fraction of the global population who do not live in the US), twice over, every 18 months.

What possible use could there be for doing this?

I recognize that the presser says the scanners will be deployed "around the world," but let's be real, this will probably be 80% US.

  • jofzar 9 hours ago

    Theoretically if this was possible (and I doubt it is, like c'mon) then it could be used for early detection of cancer.

    • compass_copium 9 hours ago

      From what I've read, full body scans are awful for this--your body forms and kills tumors all the time. The false positive rate is ridiculous.

      • owenpalmer 9 hours ago

        I'm not so worried about the data being useful, I'm worried about the machine actually working.

        I mean, with that much data, you may be able to understand under what timeframe a tumor is actually of concern. What's so bad about having some false positives?

        • genocidicbunny 9 hours ago

          > What's so bad about having some false positives?

          Having invasive surgery. Undergoing chemotherapy. The former is bad, the latter is basically a 'lets hope it kills the cancer before it kills you' situation.

          It's arguable which one is worse, but I'd rather not have to ever partake in either of them again.

      • askmike 9 hours ago

        The more we measure, the better we get at separating the false positive cases from the serious ones. Especially in a world where AI plays a bigger role in the development of the medial sciences.

        Going forward into the future and not measuring more accurately because we are worried about false positives in our current limited understanding is a very conservative take.

        • bonsai_spool 8 hours ago

          > The more we measure, the better we get at separating the false positive cases from the serious ones.

          On what basis do you say this? There is an extensive literature that refutes this. Scanners have been getting much better since the first CT scans and many more people are getting them.

      • gpm 9 hours ago

        False positives aren't a consequence of having the data, they're a consequence of misusing the data to issue diagnoses with insufficient evidence. "Just" don't set your thresholds for diagnosis so that you do that.

      • kanzure 9 hours ago

        > your body forms and kills tumors all the time. The false positive rate is ridiculous.

        Um, that's still a tumor.

        • gpm 9 hours ago

          Yeah but it's not cancer.

    • schoen 9 hours ago

      Ultrasound can also detect (some) kidney stones before they start moving and become painful, allowing an assessment of whether a medical intervention is useful or necessary. When I used to get kidney stones more frequently, there was a year or so when my doctor sent me for an ultrasound every few months to try to detect them in advance (!).

      I think this is currently seen as too expensive to do for people who have lower risk, but I mention it as an example of something that one could check for more routinely given much cheaper ultrasound scans.

      Prophylactic ultrasound exams are also apparently much more plausible on medical cost/benefit than prophylactic CT exams, because the CT exams very slightly increase one's cancer risk (https://xkcd.com/radiation/), where ultrasound doesn't.

      (At a friend's doctor's suggestion, I started taking alkali citrate supplements and switched from almond milk to oat milk; I now apparently rarely get kidney stones.)

      • kanzure 9 hours ago

        There's no reason that ultrasound imaging equipment needs to be expensive. Overall the parts are pretty cheap. I think everyone should have one next to their toothbrush. Whole body ultrasound scans would also be useful, although harder to place inside everyone's homes.

  • sandworm101 9 hours ago

    Lol. This isnt for everyone. This is for the rich. They are going to sell these things for personal use, for installation in homes. Take the top 100,000 families in the US, those that can afford a home unit. Scans then become as normal as taking a bath.

    We are well on our way to that classic scifi trope of the villian being introduced as they soak a special tub of goop. (Dune, GOTG, Star Wars)

    • tptacek 9 hours ago

      It's really not OK to victimize the rich like this either.

      • ttoinou 9 hours ago

        Poor good. Rich bad. Good stuff should go directly to poor good people, never go to rich bad people. But that thing is for rich so by definition it is bad and not for the poor

      • Paracompact 9 hours ago

        Rich people have a phobia of death, unlike the rest of us for whom depression, disease, and injustice have really removed the sting of death and turned it more into "eh, if it happens it happens." So worry not: The rich wasting their money on biohacking fads are not being scammed, they are being consoled.

        • kelseyfrog 9 hours ago

          Isn't therapy or enlightenment ultimately cheaper?

      • verandaguy 9 hours ago

        Hot take: the rich (especially the upper strata of the rich) are perfectly comfortable victimizing the non-rich in some material ways (from monopolistic practices, to lobbying against labour interests and union busting, to regulatory capture, to name a few).

        To the extent you can really call pointing their behaviour out as victimizing them, I would consider bad PR to be a fair tradeoff.

      • lovich 9 hours ago

        I can’t tell if this is serious or a top tier joke.

    • xboxnolifes 9 hours ago

      The top 100,000 families taking this scan every day would still put them 2 magnitudes below the target.

      • sandworm101 9 hours ago

        A Ferarri can do 200mph, but almost never does. Rolex watches come with helium valves, not that anyone understands what they are for let alone uses them. Luxury goods are always about untapped capacity.

        • xboxnolifes 9 hours ago

          What? This comment chain is specifically about the target of a billion full-body scans a month using 50,000 units.

          That's about 1 scan per unit, every 2 minutes, 24/7.

          • scopicaudio 7 hours ago

            50,000 hypochondriacs could pull that off easily

  • therealdrag0 9 hours ago

    I would guess build a health prediction model. Instead of next text token or next frame in a video, how about next 12 months or years of body health?

    Hopefully it doesn’t become Gattaca.

  • jonahx 9 hours ago

    > What possible use could there be for doing this?

    Early detection of disease, as well as every kind of physical issue with the body you can imagine.

    The incredulity of the question seems rooted in the medical culture of our current time. It's easy to imagine a science fiction future where scans happen not every 9 months, but daily, in your home, and the idea of not constantly checking your full body would be as strange as not brushing your teeth is to us...

  • nihonde 9 hours ago

    "What possible use could there be for doing this?"

    I've encountered this attitude before, and I always find it perplexing that there are people who are annoyed by, even hostile to, the idea of frequent health telemetry.

    What possible use? How about giving people greater visibility inside their own bodies without having to navigate the labyrinth of the healthcare machine and without having to justify themselves to actuaries?

    • lonely_wanderer 9 hours ago

      A counter point: a fixation on medical diagnoses can be counterproductive to living a good, happy, and healthy life. My implication is that data will lead to self-diagnosis, when maybe it’s not necessary.

      There’s a reason most people don’t get medical scans every checkup, they’re simply not necessary for the majority of (healthy) people.

      • nihonde 9 hours ago

        In Japan, the government gives everyone a battery of full body tests at least once per year. I guess you know better than Japan, right?

        The whole argument that "you'll worry yourself sick" is such patronizing trash. It's obviously programming that came from the insurance industry, and you lapped it right up.

        • klausa 9 hours ago

          There's a world of difference between the health checkups we get in Japan, and something like a full-body MRI/CT.

          You're not arguing in good faith when you equate those.

          • nihonde 9 hours ago

            Are you joking? 人間ドック is absolutely more than a "health checkup". Maybe do some reading: https://medical.kameda.com/general/en/ningendock/what/

            > The Ningen Dock is a comprehensive health checkup system that includes a battery of tests, including blood tests, chest X-rays, and ultrasound scans, among others as well as advanced diagnostic tests as Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), Computerized Tomography (CT) or Endoscopy. These tests can help detect potential health problems early before they become more serious or difficult to treat.

            • klausa 8 hours ago

              That is not the same as the annual mandatory health check.

              Maybe your employer pays for you to get a more comprehensive checkup by default and you're unaware of this?

              But the ones vast majority of population here gets do not include MRI or CT or Endoscopy.

              And, _even then_; specific checkups when you're looking for _specific things_ are still very different things than a full-body MRIs.

        • lonely_wanderer 9 hours ago

          I think there’s actually a difference between getting a battery of tests from a set of doctors (overseen by the government) tailored to your risk factors and a company trying to sell a fully body scan which they think you should casually get all the time.

          • nihonde 2 hours ago

            I don't think there's much difference? The technicians that perform the tests are not doctors. You usually see a doc for 5 mins at the end, to discuss any anomalies. Even then, they're just going to refer you to see your GP or a specialist. At the end of the day, the ningendoku is just information that your doctors can access. I'd much prefer a high-resolution full body scan.

            Either way, the patient should make the choice about whether they want that info, not an insurance company or a know-it-all armed with a dubious study concluding that asymptomatic conditions are better left undiscovered.

    • Barrin92 9 hours ago

      because it has negative effects. Over scanning leads to, in particular with the economic incentives of the healthcare system at large not to mention a company like this, over-treatment. It's one of the reasons countries have scaled back mammograms because women have been forced into surgery and treatment with no meaningful improvement in outcomes. Prostate cancer being another one.

      My wife's a cardiologist and hypochondriacs with smartwatches have become a frequent occurrence because healthy young people despite regular check ups have convinced themselves their watch telling them their pulse got high that one time must mean they're dying and they'll show up not one but five times.

      The same is happening with so called "sleep optimizations" which themselves can produce insomnia as people start to self-monitor and enact sleep efforts.

      • nihonde 9 hours ago

        Rather than dealing with the issue—hypochondriacs or whatever—you prefer to remove the option for the non-hypochondriacs?

        The fact that doctors like your wife think that people who are concerned about their health and want more information is a problem tells me everything I need to know about your (and her) worldview. You've dressed it up as being pragmatic, but the reality is that you're arguing for censorship and against freedom of information.

        • Barrin92 8 hours ago

          >that people who are concerned about their health and want more information is a problem

          It is a problem because there's evidence based standards for when examinations are indicated and prolong or improve a person's life. You being extremely concerned doesn't move that needle and subjecting you to tests simply because you're anxious is blatantly unethical and harmful to your psychological wellbeing.

          And nope this isn't censorship, it's being mathematically literate and understanding how data production works. Here's an actual real world example. There are aids tests that are 99% accurate. About 30 in 1000 people in the US have AIDS. 99/1 is great odds, let's test everyone, data doesn't hurt right? Except as it turns out if you test a thousand people randomly you'll have 10 false positives and 3 people with AIDS, Bayes in action.

          So if you sent every American through body scanners, which are less reliable than that test btw, you'd have quite literally millions of people in follow up procedures for diseases they do not have with their mental health ruined and the system ground to a halt, because producing information is not always the right thing to do.

          • davidivadavid 7 hours ago

            That's definitely an important point to consider, in fact something I think everyone in these conversations should be cognizant of, and also why it makes me believe the actual conversation should move to whether the device improves false positives/negatives rates or not (or at least has a chance to), which then might warrant wider access/use.

            • runako 7 hours ago

              A better question is if people are going high-res, why not go high-res with tests whose accuracy is known, and for which there are useful, data-driven treatments?

              Instead of casting a net of unknown quality every month, comparing against a null dataset (there does not exist a large dataset of these scans with outcomes for given markers).

              Why not advocate cheap, easy blood/urine tests with higher frequency? Those tests do have large reference datasets with outcomes. And they have prescriptive value: there is likely more benefit to catching hypertension or diabetes earlier in more people.

              • davidivadavid 6 hours ago

                True, though those things don't have to be mutually exclusive.

          • nihonde 2 hours ago

            Something doesn't add up. The entire Japanese healthcare system is built around the idea that preventative testing for asymptomatic conditions is effective. You can read all about it, if you want.

            Personally, I think you've swallowed some kind of health insurance industry black pill, whether you know it or not.

    • klausa 9 hours ago

      Because false positives have a tremendous emotional (and, depending on your healthcare system, also monetary) cost to patients.

    • ngruhn 8 hours ago

      I don't read the parent comment to take issue with the use case per se but the billion scans per month figure.

      Surely, whatever this is giving you, getting a scan once a month must be plenty. They need a billion people to get a scan every month.

  • d_burfoot 9 hours ago

    > What possible use could there be for doing this?

    The point is to generate an enormous unlabeled dataset. Historically, ML for medical imaging depended on a small number of labeled images - small because you needed to have an expert study the image and label it as healthy/cancer/etc. But the "GPT breakthrough" was that it was better to use vast unlabeled datasets - in the case of LLMs, text - than small labeled ones.

  • sheepolog 9 hours ago

    > What possible use could there be for doing this?

    Umm...the same use we get out of an annual physical or dental checkup.

  • dumbmrblah 9 hours ago

    Who reads these scans and who assume liabilities for missed reads?

uberex 7 hours ago

This is a full body ultrasound?

Medical I don't care about futuristic sounding stuff. Just show me evidence based and clinically useful testing.

Use AI and new scans to help sure but prove it works otherwise this could be another dead end.

rdl 5 hours ago

This will be really interesting for brain imaging I think -- particularly for non-penetrating trauma (blast, crash, falls) in environments where MRI is unsuitable/unavailable, or where potential injuries are very common and thus per-scan cost is critical.

If you scanned every American Football player before/after a game, it would probably lead to an end of the sport. Similarly with boxing, and soccer heading practice.

Also would be super useful in war zones -- you can't MRI due to metal fragments, and can't CT over and over again due to radiation, and right now most of the guidance is "don't get injured again" and is broadly ignored. Being able to scan people near point of injury (or just after high risk activities) would be great.

(Obviously lots of other uses for this in disease screening, etc.; difficulties with ultrasound due to bone, gas, etc.)

  • rasmus1610 5 hours ago

    It will be terrible for brain imaging. The ultrasound waves can’t go through the skull and thus can’t image the brain. Additionally you would have to drown the patient since you need a medium other than air between the ultrasound emitting probe and the body which is water in their device.

    CT is more than sufficient for imaging the brain in a case of trauma and MRI is not automatically better than CT in every case.

    (I am a neuroradiologist)

jablongo 8 hours ago

This is very ambitious and commendable. They are putting their bootstrapped money into something incredibly cool and potentially useful. Regulatory will be hard, but perhaps they can do something like a class 1 device which doesn't diagnose anything / is used by physical therapists and they sell them to gyms. I also expect the resolution to increase rapidly. If they can convert profits from generating weird ai images into new medical technology thats a win. Good luck! They will probably fail but this is what ambition looks like!

alexcpn 4 hours ago

After reading this first, it looked almost like a joke, like how Google used to do Google- TISP Toilet Internet Service Provider https://archive.google/tisp/install.html

Even now without Xrays it is very hard to really even see if there are blocks in your artery usuing ultrasound (Echocardiography alone). Ultrasound is used indirectly by measuring blood flow difference between stress and rest - not a spa session anyway. Looks like a prank really

  • andrerath 3 hours ago

    3D Ultrasound helps a lot in this regard. Getting flow velocity out and tissue motion is very possible if you can support the data rates (in my group we've had some luck getting coronary artery 3D flow out using 3D ultrasound probes). The issue is that 2D ultrasound and flow is an unsolvable problem, so you really do need all 3 dimensions here.

yanis_t 4 hours ago

I can only applaud. Regardless of whether this device is possible, or economically viable, this is a brave move and a bold vision. Taking bigger risks is what what makes the advances possible.

tanin 9 hours ago

I had to check whether this was some kind of an april fool joke.

It looks like a legit attempt. Wow. This is insanely innovative.

Reubend 10 hours ago

I don't really understand the connection; they went from image generation to medical scanning?

  • cglan 10 hours ago

    is it not similar? taking raw data, some vector of data and constructing a visual image

    • rich_sasha 9 hours ago

      There's deterministic algos for it and have existed for ages.

      Medical imaging is literally the last of the last places where you want to hallucinate a tiny little blob.

      • ElProlactin 9 hours ago

        > Medical imaging is literally the last of the last places where you want to hallucinate a tiny little blob.

        Where's your sense of fun and adventure? /s

    • autoexec 8 hours ago

      One thing invents a bunch of fake bullshit using artist's work and the other is supposed to give you an image of something real and meaningful that wasn't just hallucinated or patched together. All from the guy who brought us Leap Motion, a gimmicky product that failed to live up to the hype. This isn't exactly encouraging. If it actually works we won't need a press release on their website, we'll hear about it in medical journals and it'll be doctors singing its praises. You'll find it being used in hospitols and not pop-up spas.

      Only after that happens will I have to even consider how comfortable I am with the idea of handing over what they suggest will be massive amounts of highly personal medical data to this company and how much I trust them not to exploit that information for their own purposes and profit.

wxw 5 hours ago

Awesome work. The second video is great. I don’t know enough about medical science to consider viability and shortcomings, but I’m impressed by the dream. Keep cooking.

And even if the device fails, I’m sure the spa will be nice.

pera 4 hours ago

> Today we're gonna announce something a little weird and a little crazy, but also spectacular and filled with hope.

Why is that almost every LLM generated article sounds like a LinkedIn motivational post?

(this is not a rhetorical question, I would really like to know why, from all the writing styles, this is the most prevalent one)

Jabbles 2 hours ago

This is comparable to datacenters in space. We have no idea whether:

a) it is possible to construct such a scanner

b) the results of a scan would be able to diagnose anything

c) the false-positive rate would be low enough to make this useful

But it is probably very good as a source of speculation to hype the valuation of the company, because iff the above issues are solved, then this could be very valuable.

milchek 9 hours ago

Very unexpected but also really uplifting to see that they would spinoff a division to tackle this - it's ambitious. Obviously they've identified that the vertical is big enough and that they have the expertise or novel approach to tackle it, but i'm really curious to know how this came about internally.

Nikhil37475 9 hours ago

Impressive vision. Excited to see how 'Ultrasonic CT' handles real-world clinical validation challenges.

andrewinardeer 9 hours ago

Genuine question.

Outside of providing access to their core AI products at a free or discounted rate, what philanthropic initiatives are OpenAI and Anthropic pursuing to improve the lives of people in developing countries?. I can't recall seeing anything on their blog recently about it. Happy to be corrected.

schnitzelstoat 4 hours ago

> As you descend you pass through a ring made of half a million tiny squares each the size of a fine grain of sand, and each capable of acting as both a tiny speaker and a tiny microphone.

Is this actually possible? It seems really ambitious to aim to open by the end of 2027.

causal 9 hours ago

So if it works: Awesome.

The spa approach is a little weird. FDA workaround?

  • captainbland 6 hours ago

    It's probably hard to make it hygienic enough to be standard hospital equipment to be honest

  • i5heu 6 hours ago

    I think it is because they want something that feels nice so people will go there more often?

    So they get more data of the same person over time.

dwd 8 hours ago

That video gave me ESB Han Solo carbon freeze vibes. Not sure if that was the stylistic intent they were going for. I guess there's a good chance those who worked on the video weren't even born when it was released.

tyre 9 hours ago

This is pretty, but it's goals make it sound under-thought and somewhat silly. Typical "SF is coming to save the world" stuff.

> Our ambitious goal is by 2031 to have a fleet of over 50,000 scanners worldwide - with a total scanning capacity of a billion scans a month - enough to cover a huge percentage of the global population, or enough to give regular, monthly scans to a billion people.

> What This Leads To

> Whether or not our scanners are a service that everyone uses, to us, the most important thing is that everyone will be able to use them.

There is no way these will be available to a billion people. This is a luxury product for rich people, which is fine, but they cannot afford to run these for a billion people every month. Think of the infrastructure—both human and physical—to provide that. Think of the distribution of wealth across the world. Come on.

There are so many small, boring details that will have to be ironed out: many Americans won't fit in that machine, kids will not sit still, you'll have to clean them constantly (people pee in warm water), buying and re-tooling property for spas with zoning and licenses is arduous and jurisdiction-specific, etc. etc. etc.

What they are pitching and focused on (data, models, tech) is the fun part. It's not nearly most of the problem.

I'm not sure if they believe this (naïve, unserious) or if they don't (lying). Either way doesn't build trust.

hermannj314 1 hour ago

You don't need to build a perfect med spa, you only need to control the patents of the key pieces of a med spa.

This is nothing more thab a prophylactic patent grab to stifle competition and progress in this space for the next decade and/or hoover up patient data behind a paywall where they will gladly lease the weights and bias cure to you own disease back to you in the form of a subscription.

Cyclone_ 8 hours ago

People on here really need to understand what the incidentalome is.

internet_points 4 hours ago

This is one of the creepiest "big AI" product launches I've read. I know it's becoming a meme, but that spa looks like something from a Black Mirror episode.

If they were just creating a new less-invasive and differently informative alternative to fMRI / PET / EEG / CT for researchers and doctors to use in hospitals, where experienced human doctors were given agency in finding out how best to use the tool and interpret the results (understanding all the caveats that go for full body scans, false positive rates and so on[0]), then that would be amazing, a tiny step forward for the human race. But packaged like this, eww.

[0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48580255

ali_m 3 hours ago

This is surely trolling? "Fullbody Ultrasonic Computational Tomography" has quite the acronym..

ChildOfChaos 3 hours ago

Well that's certainly an interesting pivot, when Midjourney where set to announce hardware, who predicted this?

owenpalmer 9 hours ago

I think getting more medical data could prevent a lot of health problems, and collecting it in a relaxed and frequent environment could be interesting. This announcement is honestly just... a bit weird. They're talking about wanting to do a billion scans a month, but they haven't even mentioned what the ultrasound data can tell you about your health, nor have they showed a physical demo of the product. I think the latter is the most important part, does it actually work?

wouldbecouldbe 54 minutes ago

HN is so negative, they are genuinely making a interesting move instead of just generating BS images, they are actually trying to make something that could benefit humanity. Whether they succeed or not, who knows, but great that they are trying.

Ameo 4 hours ago

Hell yeah, my AI image generation company is now running an alternative medicine AI MRI-alternative imagine spa. Hell yeah.

1970-01-01 8 hours ago

So how exactly is the scan counter going to hit their target of a billion per month? Are they scanning us while we sleep?

  • geor9e 8 hours ago

    No, you stand there for 60 seconds.

    If every hospital had one, even if they sat idle 90% of the day, thats enough to hit that target.

    • 1970-01-01 15 minutes ago

      A billion hours ago, human life appeared on earth. A billion minutes ago, Christianity emerged. A billion seconds ago, the Beatles changed music forever. A billion scans ago was last month?

      It does not work this way.

  • someothherguyy 2 hours ago

    I don't think it says it is a target, just that they will have that capacity.

thih9 6 hours ago

> But suddenly, you have a huge library of data about your health.

Why don’t they approach this as a regular medical product?

With this spa angle I’m worried about hidden motives; perhaps data collection is a major goal. Or maybe this tech is not reliable enough.

hamburgererror 4 hours ago

> Midjourney Spa

Those visuals look straight out of the Backrooms

  • schnitzelstoat 4 hours ago

    It reminded me more of Blade Runner, especially with the gold lighting.

    • hamburgererror 4 hours ago

      I feel confident I can pass the Voight-Kampff test

ludde 9 hours ago

Will there be a way to use this scanner for people that are unable to stand up because of a disability or medical condition?

  • adamredwoods 9 hours ago

    Great point. Scanning healthy people is one thing, people who truly need help (like myself) is another!

hmokiguess 8 hours ago

This is next level "never let them know your next move" type of play. I hope they win.

zx8080 4 hours ago

Thank you very much, Midjourney.

If some of my doctors were software engineers I probably would be dead by now.

Or mid-dead.

hoofedear 8 hours ago

Hypochondriacs everywhere rejoice

  • wkoszek 5 hours ago

    Yup. But it'd be good to get certainty by going to Walmart or CVS or Wholefoods and getting a scan for $30.

cryo32 5 hours ago

Sounds like programmers woke up from a fever dream and decided they can come up with an idea and flesh out the details later.

runako 8 hours ago

This is interesting & ambitious!

Not a physician, I wonder about the general efficacy of random scans vs more boring traditional things like bloodwork. That is: is there more clinical power in doing blood + urine labs monthly or body scans like this?

grego 4 hours ago

I'm sure I read that 30% will be immortal there, but suddenly the blog post changed... :)

razorbeamz 6 hours ago

This is absolutely a scam. Seems incredibly fishy.

neuroelectron 1 hour ago

So this is the purpose of building the backroom pools

trolleski 4 hours ago

AI is about to find out the difference between talking and doing. Exciting!

macleginn 3 hours ago

TL;DR: "Your body passes through a ring of underwater sensors, each acting like a dolphin, using its echolocation. The sensors send ultrasonic sound waves through your body from every angle. With enough waves, and enough angles, we form an image of what's happening inside your body."

Dolphins aside, is this basically a new angle on https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultrasound_computer_tomography?

Imustaskforhelp 1 hour ago

Midjourney people are talented people within image generation but this is giving me some really serious theranos vibes.

I presume that Theranos had some talented people as well and some strong figures back at its time as well. It isn't the strongest of indicators.

It's been a really long time since I heard the name of Midjourney again. their name got a bit unheard of after LLM models like Chatgpt and nano banana started supported image generation, so I am unsure if this is being done to get known again or to pivot from image generation itself.

There are tons of factors which make me a bit skeptic about the whole ordeal.

jdw64 9 hours ago

Why is everyone so negative about this? Getting a CT or X-ray and then having AI do early screening on cases that doctors can pass along doesn't seem like a bad idea to me.

  • tptacek 9 hours ago

    It is in fact very probably a bad idea. A good search term here is "incidentaloma". The balance of evidence currently appears to suggest that full body scans for asymptomatic patients are a net negative for health.

    • abtinf 9 hours ago

      Those claims are extremely suspect and completely support the current rationing and power structure of healthcare.

      But, even granting they could be true, they would be true under the status quo.

      Sure, a one off full body scan might be scary and lead to unnecessary action. But if a technology of the sort being described here were to exist, you would just get daily (or more frequent) scans to monitor the situation. Is that tumor actually growing or is it just a transient thing your immune system is dealing with? Way easier to tell if imaging is cheap, fast, and frequent.

      And then there is the data.

      No one knows what is actually going on in our bodies. If we had the ability to do billions of scans, imagine the longitudinal studies that could be performed.

      It would radically alter medicine.

    • nihonde 9 hours ago

      How brainwashed by the healthcare machine do you have to be to think that catching asymptomatic medical issues is a bad thing? The argument against is literally:

      - patients will worry too much, and - it will cost time and money to investigate.

      Both spurious rationales cooked up by an industry that is at least as hostile to humanity as it is helpful.

      • tptacek 9 hours ago

        Yes, it's the healthcare industry's fault, they're brainwashing me into not getting more procedures. Sounds very plausible.

        • nihonde 7 hours ago

          Insurance companies dislike paying for procedures instead of passively collecting premiums. Not sure how you missed that.

    • throwawayben 1 hour ago

      couldn't it be different when scanning becomes very cheap and quick and it's the delta over n scans that gives signal?

  • nonethewiser 9 hours ago

    Because a lot of the hatred for AI is just hysteria.

  • ajyoon 9 hours ago

    People are responding negatively to what looks very much like vaporware from a company stepping way outside its domain into medical imaging with a bizarrely positioned announcement post. Medical imaging is a very active field of research with many brilliant minds working on it. If this were truly an MRI killer, they would not be announcing it as a spa.

    • jdw64 9 hours ago

      When I think of 'YAMAHA's case, I believe they can fully realize their own ideas. These people are mainly experts in image-related fields, right? And we're talking about image AI—which, in practice, needs to recognize the characteristics of objects—so it seems to me that it's a fairly relevant field. But since you're more of an expert than I am, your opinion probably carries more weight.

    • jdw64 9 hours ago

      After reading to what you said and thinking about it seriously, I do think there were some parts that were too unrealistic. I considered a few things, such as whether the cost of data transmission during streaming, that is, the cost of constructing an entire human body from this single slice, is actually reasonable. Thanks for your comment.

r0ckarong 5 hours ago

They should ask their LLM for fun things to do in prison! Or ask Elizabeth Holmes.

bozdemir 8 hours ago

This looks like straight from a sci-fi movie. Crazy how fast things are becoming to look like alien tech. Pretty amazing.

tomasGiden 4 hours ago

Interesting but many issues which have been listed here are valid. This is my take on the largest of them.

Preventive testing is not always positive. False negatives creates a false sense of security and false positives drives unnecessary medical procedures. For example, what if this instrument sees "something" and a doctor then follows up with a biopsy, x-ray or explorative surgery. These will all have negative side effects. There has even been a debate of if mammography is a net positive. I think it might be but I'm just saying that even such a thing is debatable. The question is not only if the these early tests find anything, its also a question of whether detecting it early changes the prognosis. Maybe its untreatable anyway? Or maybe it would still be treatable if detected later? And then comes the cost of course, is it economical to do these scans on a population level relative to the alternative cost.

Building medical systems is not for the faint of heart. I was part of a startup building a Micro CT system with the long term goal of using it to detect tumors in biopsies live during surgery (1 um resolution for cm-sized samples) without waiting a week for the normal analysis. We also started with non-medical instrument (general research) and we never got to the medical instrument before we ran out of money (we engineers were too bad at sales). But we did study up on the (European) standards quite a bit. They are not crazy in any way. Its simply that you follow good engineering practice BUT it is hard to move from building a non-medical system to medical system after the fact. The standard is a process standard so it basically says "You should have followed this process when you designed your product". And you need be real careful setting your Intended Use and showing that you have Verified and Validated that your system can be used for the intended use. So most likely they need to build one product now (Body Composition Analysis), use that for research and then set up their Quality Management System before they rebuild everything from requirements to risk analysis to test plans to hardware to software. 10 years is probably on the low side for this and quite the cost.

bschwindHN 9 hours ago

Midjourney out there making the pool rooms a reality

jonplackett 5 hours ago

Are we at peak AI yet?

AI company announces AI thing using AI video mock up

punnerud 5 hours ago

Why not have 5,6 rings at different levels and do it live in 3D?

mchusma 8 hours ago

Bravo for this vision. I wish them well and hope they succeed. I look forward to the first real technical reports.

rarisma 5 hours ago

Welcome back theranos

Kristencline 5 hours ago

ER Nurse here:

This produces images as good as an MRI- did I get that right? We already have those- they are relatively cheap ($2000 if you paid cash) and have already been scaled.

The only difference seems to be the speed of the test. But how long does it take to be lowered in and out of the water, not to mention the fact that you are soaking wet afterward. An MRI of the brain takes 15 minutes, only requires you to lie flat on a table, and then you can go about your day.

So we already have this technology- ultrasound is well understood, and free to perform, a bedside ultrasound is around $40k.

These are not medical grade images, so I am not certain how they will reduce medical costs by 50%- no FDA clearance means the images cannot be used for medical diagnosis. Meaning if it finds something serious, you will STILL need imaging at the hospital for the finding to be actionable.

Baby boomers are about to hit the healthcare system hard- and none of them will be able to tolerate being dunked underwater. This technology cannot scale to hospitals, the main consumers of medical imaging.

I appreciate the hopeful outlook, but creating a more elaborate and expensive way to have an MRI done seems like a bit of a fools errand, especially when 50% of bankruptcies in America are due to medical debt.

What are the metrics this will report? What information does it provide that is not already available via other existing means? What is the benefit of daily or monthly full body MRIs? What are you monitoring? How will this achieve the goals they claim 'cannot be overstated' but also cannot be enumerated...

Access to better imaging technology is not a barrier to obtaining medical care, there are imaging centers on every corner. MRI and ultrasound technology are already as advanced ad this, utilize the same ultrasonic technology to obtain images, and are already manufactured at scale.

I am really struggling to figure out the problem this is trying to solve

  • deanc 4 hours ago

    It’s valuable to have input of healthcare professionals here. I don’t disagree with the majority of what you’re saying.

    However, the value add here is it can do your whole body a lot faster than doing a full body MRI (which would take hours at least?)

rdpfeffer 8 hours ago

Part of me is super excited about this.

The other part wonders if this is the next clinkle.

MJ has shipped stuff before though so I’m optimistic.

perks_12 2 hours ago

i want a full body scan from the friendly discord app.

IshKebab 1 hour ago

I used to work in ultrasound, and full body scans with the body underwater is definitely feasible and probably a good idea. Bit of a weird direction for them to take though??

Also there's absolutely no way that it will be as good as MRI. In general ultrasound imaging is shit. The main reasons it is used are because it is very cheap and completely harmless. The actual images you get are mostly just speckle. If MRI was cheap then nobody would use ultrasound. Full body ultrasound will definitely give better images because you have a wider aperture and can do fancier beamforming (probably "full matrix capture" and then beamforming in software; normally ultrasound probes do it in hardware). But it's still not going to be as good as MRI.

The exception to that is pregnancy - that is a super ideal case because you are imaging a nice clean interface in a fluid and there are no pesky bones in the way. Most of the body isn't like that at all.

nelox 3 hours ago

Who needs a head anyway?

JCTheDenthog 9 hours ago

Assuming it all works 50k scanners running nonstop at 60 seconds a scan is 2.1 billion scans a month. Assuming they aren't lying/exaggerating about anything, and assuming there is no downtime/setup/etc. in between. In other words, reeks of massive bullshit.

adonovan 9 hours ago

Can someone with expertise explain what kinds of medical imaging are theoretically possible with this kind of sensor?

  • themantalope 9 hours ago

    If you could obtain volumetric/3D ultrasound data that was not operator dependent, that would be great.

    US is a good diagnostic tool, but it can be challenging to read because obtaining good images is very operator dependent. You need to have a good sonographer that can get the right views, knows how to adjust the imaging parameters to produce high quality images. It's not like CT or MR where the tech just sets a few basic scanning parameters and let the machine do its job.

    However, see my other comment, the example images they provide on the page do not look great, very limited organ detail.

    edit: clarification

  • captainbland 6 hours ago

    More just interested in medical imaging in general but: unobstructed soft tissue imaging is possible with this, e.g. abdomen. You can get reasonably good differentiation between types of tissues using ultrasound in this context although there is the potential for ambiguous findings where further scans like MRI will be required to get less ambiguous information about it.

    Chest cavity, brain tissue scanning etc. will likely remain unrealistic as ultrasound waves won't penetrate bone and the ribs and skull will interfere.

rishabhpoddar 7 hours ago

I really wasn't expecting a hardware device from midjourney! Incredible!!

robertclaus 9 hours ago

Isn't this how MRIs and stuff already work, they just use waves with much more appropriate wavelengths...?

  • themantalope 9 hours ago

    MRI uses EM radiation in the radiowave frequency band. This is using sound.

    • concrete_head 8 hours ago

      And doesn't bone pretty much block all ultrasound waves? There is a time and place for ultrasound, just like there is for MRI or Xray.

      So im curious to know the limitations of this device

      • diabllicseagull 8 hours ago

        I'm just guessing here but similar to a CAT scan, having actuators/probes at all angles could mean you can get an image around such obstacles. skull is probably an exception and it's the reason why we don't see any head scans in any one of the videos.

        • i5heu 6 hours ago

          Also I imagine it pretty difficult to get good data from that because of all the muscles that do stuff if put in water and you would hold your breath.

          There is no way people will put up with that.

bandrami 9 hours ago

If this can image a fetus in utero they're already cutting themselves off from India as a market

manapause 6 hours ago

20 or so years ago while working for a Startup in the Home-Health EMR Space - it was my job to develop and integrate the proper processing of incoming visit forms. After an outage, I performed an audit of our incoming forms and noticed some anomalies in the billing patterns of doctors belonging to one clinic. In other words, these doctors either had the highest concentration of extremely sick patients - or they were committing Medicare fraud.

At the end of the post mortum with the CMO, as I was getting ready to leave I decided to bring this to his attention. I’ll never forget the change of mood preceding the dressing down I received: “do not ever put yourself in a position to make clinical decisions.”

3 months later, the charting anomalies were so egregious that the CMO’s spot-checks led him to sit the medical director of that physicians clinic down for a chat. They were good doctors, but they were over-billing. A year and a half later their practice goes under pre-payment review, and four years after I wrote a script that noticed an anomaly - the head MD of the practice was sent to prison for 4 years after collecting millions of dollars in over-billed house calls.

I loved working in healthcare, and I still miss it to this day. I don’t know where I am going with this, but right now I believe there is a diagnostic technology out there that is being used in veterinary science or piloted in some other country that could save a statistic level of lives …. However, due to the fact that doctors practice medicine and we don’t, as a group they act as defacto gate-keepers (which they are entitled to be as clinicians), the best thing you can do is to incentivize them with money (like Obama did) with Medicare bonuses for using an EMR that logged CCRs and alerted the doc if the patient didn’t have certain vaccine information in the elderly.

If the first guy to wash his hands was seen as a lunatic, the first geriatric practitioner to give over an iota of their clinical practice to automate Rx dispersal while navigating poly pharmacology concerns will go to jail for a narcotics crimes or will be labeled to heretic until Medicare pays them all for it.

omgwtfbyobbq 9 hours ago

So... Rampant point of care ultrasound?

Sounds good to me.

storus 9 hours ago

Can one buy it anywhere? At what cost? Would be cool for real-time biohacking and immediate feedback.

Topfi 1 hour ago

This is very concerning:

> Normally, for every diagnostic medical capability you need FDA approval. We’re starting by just giving you detailed body composition maps — and we’ll be submitting regular test results to the FDA for increased capabilities.

Ah yes, just "detailed body composition maps", nothing major. It's just radiology, not like people spend years of extensive education and have to sign off on every finding, often lying awake at night that they may have missed something. It's easy, don't let the Doctorpolice tell you otherwise. Seems very ̶T̶h̶e̶r̶a̶n̶o̶s̶ familiar. Also, not saying em dash automatically denote LLM writing, but come on, this whole thing reads very slopgenerated.

I have questions in general.

Why Midjourney? Do they have expertise? Even if so, why reuse a name that doesn't exactly denote reliable, consistent or trustworthy output? Why start as a spa with fancy LED lights clearly focused on experience over selling/leasing the whole-body implementation to third parties? Is the latter actually theres, how exactly does the licensing deal look and again, why them? Have they got any type of independent data to back up any of their findings? This just has the smell of something that, a few years from now everyone will be astounded that anyone ever believed this to be possible, for it is so patently ridiculous.

Never been a fan of image generation models for a variety of reasons, but this is downright dangerous, no way about it. Even if the technology as licensed works well, there are very good reasons why operating an MRI and seeing patients is not something you can do, just because you can afford to buy one. There is expertise needed here that, if this was coming from an established Medical Clinic and backed by research I'd be skeptical for such a spa setup to overcome, but again, this isn't even that. Best case scenario, this causes a VC to go bankrupt before the "spa" open and gets a front page on the goop magazine, worst case, patients are harmed, families destroyed and a comparatively minor penalty is administered/a pardon bought.

Not an assessment on the underlying concept/technology mind you, just the way Midjourney of all people are going about this.

OkWing99 7 hours ago

For those who think this is a joke, there's no differnce between this concept and data centers in space concept, that's worth $2T. Both are not yet proven to work yet. At least they're not screwing the pubilc.

a-dub 9 hours ago

my first reaction: this pivot makes no sense at all to me.

my second reaction: maybe it does? did they hire up an army of physicists to make better diffusion models or something and they actually have people on staff who can do this?

avree 9 hours ago

Good luck. Had a friend do a startup that was using similar algos to how Google Maps detect roads in satellite imagery to detect cancer in tissues. Actually worked pretty well - ended up dying in the super long FDA approval phase.

The images and description of the launch seem like they are behind where my buddy was 10+ years ago - so I expect a pretty difficult road ahead, between getting to where it's actually medically viable, and then stomaching the FDA process.

decimalenough 9 hours ago

> It starts by stepping into a shallow pool of golden light. You then begin to descend into the water. Your body passes through a ring of underwater sensors, each acting like a dolphin, using its echolocation.

...what. You descend into water and it scans your whole body? How do you breathe? How do you come out the other end?

Have they actually invented some type of novel scanning technology, or is this just AI slop gone wild?

niteshpant 4 hours ago

This is the most insane thing to happen to medical imaging

To understand Midjourney Medical (MM), think about current major options: - CT/X-ray: harmful if done too much && can't do for pregnant women - MRI: slow, have to stay still, no metal - Ultrasound: really low fidelity

Midjourney Medical is fast, high fidelity, and perfectly safe!

The holy trifecta.

Insane vision. Insane work. Hats off to the team

genxy 9 hours ago

Where is the belly button?!

ericpauley 9 hours ago

Isn’t modern ultrasound already ultrasound CT, just localized?

  • bobmcnamara 9 hours ago

    Most isn't 3d, it's hand positioned single slices.

dostick 6 hours ago

THERANOJOURNEY Why put a person in A Wallace Corp. water tube thing when you can deduct all that from the drop of blood?

vrganj 2 hours ago

So the device itself seems cool and potentially useful as a low cost high volume alternative to MRIs that might be worth it for just like regular checkups at doctors offices before referring to more serious imaging if it detects something.

The whole spa angle is cringe at best, a glaring red flag at worst. Why not market this as a serious medical device if it actually works? Who asked for a spa with a novel computer imaging thing?

rich_sasha 9 hours ago

Will they also sample a single drop of blood? That would be fitting.

koinedad 8 hours ago

This is pretty exciting. I hope it works.

Yondle 8 hours ago

Upcoming IPO or acquisition by any chance?

dsign 5 hours ago

It has been said in this thread that we shouldn't scan healthy people because false positives. That's a good point. But I also think we are still looking at the small picture: catch diseases.

The slightly bigger picture is to prevent them, and there early warnings can help a lot.

At a yet slightly higher level, some people think that we are about to enter the age of superintelligence. That's a separate debate but it's not something I would disregard entirely. In an age of superintelligence, our goals and tools for healthcare can be different. I'm very much doubt that the medical establishment and we as a society will embrace a world where each person has some model of their metabolism running on some hardware and being updated and monitored 24/7, but this is already a reality in many industries where it is called "digital twins", so maybe this is something you'll go for if you are a trillionaire.

Zooming out and flying higher, the goal is of course to be young forever and let your body stay away in state space from most diseases. Is that something superintelligence can do?

epsteingpt 8 hours ago

They made the opening credits from Westward.

Congrats!

dogmatism 9 hours ago

Is this company public? Can I short them?

devmor 9 hours ago

This would be really cool if it comes to fruition and works in the way they want it to.

Given the source, I will treat it as nonsense science fiction until it’s built, functional and scientifically tested.

taneq 9 hours ago

I would have expected a lot more focus on privacy from something designed to regularly and casually create detailed 3D images of humans. The word 'privacy' doesn't even appear in the text.

raincole 7 hours ago

It's a plot twist no one expected coming, to say the least.

dodu_ 8 hours ago

I assume this is like Theranos until proven otherwise.

But hey if not, actually cool.

frobisher 7 hours ago

we're hitting the hype peak shortly

lokar 9 hours ago

Strong theranos vibes

alkyon 4 hours ago

We are at pets.com stage of AI bubble. This time the business model is LLM-generated, though.

EduardLev 9 hours ago

How are people possibly taking this seriously?

> That, collectively, we can begin to change our relationship with our bodies and start to ask questions like: if we can catch things early, can we change our lifestyles to correct them?

We can already ask this question...

> And seeing our bodies change over time, alongside our actions, how much can we improve our health, our minds, and our lives?

Again, we can already ask this question

> We think it's completely possible that with enough early imaging in the future, the world could avoid 30% of all deaths and 50% of all healthcare costs. The cultural, physical, and mental health benefits of all of this are hard to comprehend, but also hard to overstate.

What? I have no idea what is meant here by "hard to overstate".

> You want as much data as you can get about your health as quickly and as cheaply as possible. In other words, you want a technology optimized for getting as many “megabytes per second per dollar” of information about your body.

Thanks for including the "megabytes per second per dollar" unit breakdown, I didn't understand the first sentence at all without that!

> And we live longer, healthier lives, better lives.

More AI slop

> When you step into the water, you’re standing on top of a platform. The platform is connected to rails and begins to descend into the water - an elevator gently lowering you at around 2 inches, or 5 centimeters, per second.

More AI slop. You'd only be done in 60 seconds if you're exactly 5 feet tall

  • davidivadavid 7 hours ago

    2 inches / sec * 60 sec = 120 inches = 10 ft ? It also doesn't seem like it scans your head from what I've seen.

rasse 8 hours ago

Dipping into the pool of piss is a curious design choice.

sevenzero 6 hours ago

Health data in the hands of some AI company, what could go wrong

kmoser 8 hours ago

> "Fullbody Ultrasonic Computational Tomography"

FUCT, huh? Genius marketing move.

hubraumhugo 8 hours ago

It's great to see money made in one of the few remaining unregulated fields like math and software applied to problems in the heavily regulated healthcare industry. There is an asymmetry in healthcare innovation that nobody ever got fired for blocking a good thing, but you can lose your job for approving a bad one.

I'm also following the very inspirational journey of the former Gitlab CEO who battles cancer by founding companies with his own money [0].

[0] https://sytse.com/cancer/

joduplessis 5 hours ago

This looks remarkably dystopian.

brcmthrowaway 9 hours ago

There's a certain type of people the Midjourney folks are involved with in SF. They're high on their own supply. See also hacker houses etc

dyauspitr 9 hours ago

But why? It doesn’t say why?

jofzar 10 hours ago

This is the most "getting high on your own supply" I have ever seen.

What the hell are they talking about. This is no way real and a late April fools joke right? Right?

  • jofzar 9 hours ago

    Surely they have a paper or something on this?

kamma4434 1 hour ago

Medical Doctors: scans on healthy patients are not a good idea

Tech bros: hold my beer…

tills13 10 hours ago

The app known for making shit up (as in: that's it's whole shtick)... Getting into medical advice?

  • potatoman22 9 hours ago

    Generative models have been used in healthcare for a while for things like drug design and data generation. Not to mention all the algorithms (and probably ML) used in generating results for MRI and CT scans. I don't think this is that crazy provided they can prove it's effective.

thorum 9 hours ago

I wish them all the best and hope they succeed, but can’t help but suspect they’ve fallen into deep LLM psychosis. Even if you assume they can build this thing and it works as described and then get past all the regulatory hurdles, the scale of infrastructure they’re talking about is enormous.

  • randycupertino 9 hours ago

    > David Holz is the Founder & CEO of Midjourney, a generative artificial intelligence (AI)-powered platform that allows users to generate unique artwork such as characters, images and depictions through short text prompts.

    I guess they pivoted from making ai-artwork to ultrasounds?

    • meric_ 9 hours ago

      They founded LeapMotion previously which was pretty big and totally unrelated to AI. They've been doing all sorts of shenanigans it seems

    • sberens 9 hours ago

      Also fmr cofounder of leap motion, which developed a mouse that didn't you to touch it!

  • rellfy 9 hours ago

    You can just build things

    • WalterGR 9 hours ago

      “Just building” radiation emitters like CT scanners is a bad idea.

      • oompydoompy74 9 hours ago

        This is ultrasound. You didn’t read the article. It’s perfectly safe.

  • nonethewiser 9 hours ago

    > can’t help but suspect they’ve fallen into deep LLM psychosis

    What do you mean here?

    The idea came from LLMs? They built this with LLMs?

  • jrmg 9 hours ago

    can’t help but suspect they’ve fallen into deep LLM psychosis

    This is what came to my mind first too. It feels like the sort of thing you could come up with after a lot of ‘that’s a great insight!’, with the LLM eventually projecting absolute certainty that it’s a ground-breaking idea that’s definitely going to work.

    I’m not sure whether I like that this is my knee-jerk reaction.

    Do they have any sort of prototypes of this hardware that’s going to be working reliably in their custom-built spa in the notoriously difficult-to-get-permits-in San Francisco by the end of next year?…

dakolli 4 hours ago

They'll get so much money, all the 60 year old billionaires in SF are so desperate not to die.

danpalmer 9 hours ago

The scans take 60 seconds, but at their stated numbers each machine would need to do a scan every 30 seconds 24/7. At this point I stopped reading because I don't have time to parse slop.

  • Jtsummers 9 hours ago

    Well, the math is the other way. If you assume a 30 day month, you have 2,592,000 seconds each month to perform scans in. With 1,000,000,000 target scans and 50,000 machines, that's 20,000 scans per month per machine.

    2,592,000 seconds / 20,000 scans = 129.6 seconds/scan

    If you really hate your customers and don't care about cleaning out the tanks between scans, you could make this work. They have to be either able bodied to be able to move in and out quickly enough, or if they're not you just toss them unceremoniously onto the platform and drag them off after.

    • danpalmer 8 hours ago

      Apologies, must have got the maths wrong somewhere in the middle, but anyone who has ever had a medical scan will know that 2 minutes is laughable.

      Realistically, a 60 second scan is going to take ~10 mins minimum, and will operate 8 hours a day, let's say charitably 7 days a week. Assume 50% utilisation due to staffing, repair, holidays, etc, we're looking at ~36m a month, or 0.036% of what is being pitched here. (8hrs * 6 scans * 30 days * 0.5 utilisation * 50k machines).

      • Jtsummers 8 hours ago

        Yep, and with full body submersion, they'll need to change out that water regularly. And people think data centers waste water, Midjourney says, "Hold my beer."

        • schmorptron 5 hours ago

          you can build the datacenter right next to the tank and use the now-warm cooling water to pump into the tanks!

nearlyepic 9 hours ago

This shit is immune to parody, it’s the most California thing to ever exist. “We’ll fix your health problems with an AI spa”. A spa. Give me a break.

esafak 8 hours ago

This is kind of cool shit that makes Silicon Valley great. Thanks for switching it up!

rvz 9 hours ago

At least it isn't yet another AI wrapper product and it is a bet on useful hardware.

ElenaDaibunny 9 hours ago

spa as a regulatory bypass is clever, body comp data first and diagnostics later. 500k transducers doing full body ultrasound in 60s is a massive hardware bet for an image gen company tho

brianbest101 9 hours ago

I just want more people to take on crazy big bets.

tptacek 10 hours ago

This is a joke, right?

  • ttoinou 9 hours ago

    Yes it's a joke, instead of this project we should wait for officially approved doctors to come up with this in 2060

    • jakelazaroff 9 hours ago

      What reason is there to believe that will happen?

BrokenCogs 8 hours ago

Wait is this just an ultrasound tomographic scanner?

donohoe 10 hours ago

Amazing. Unless you’re in a wheelchair or can’t stand.

  • fastball 9 hours ago

    Presumably you can just hang from above.

    • donohoe 9 hours ago

      I doubt it. Would that not interfere with the scan? I’ve really no idea on the merits of this.

bhouston 9 hours ago

Hmmm… such a slow rollout. In this age of AI assisted development I would expect them to move faster. I would be concerned about Chinese tech replicating this and then selling it to competing wellness spas.

I guess some type of software platform would add some competitive distancing?

I get the benefits of regular scans although I also know that they tend to catch a lot of otherwise benign tumors that can cause a lot of stress.

  • skavi 9 hours ago

    it would suck if Chinese tech advanced medical care faster or made it cheaper.

  • ttoinou 9 hours ago

    Being realistic is good

ddxv 8 hours ago

It's interesting to see an AI company need to pivot so hard in order to find revenue. I guess this means there is very little easy money to be made as more and more models get created, shared and downloaded by others.

alpineman 3 hours ago

Great, a hallucinated output that only the super wealthy can afford, only to waste doctors' time with the need to run every test again at huge expense. Can we not leave medicine to the professionals? Creating a ghibli rip-off is not the same as diagnosing cancer.

  • ixaxaar 2 hours ago

    Well healthcare needs its own DLSS 5!

    • alpineman 2 hours ago

      I would just add that my wife is a doctor and in the age of AI it's truly unbearable. In addition to super long hours and stress they now have to deal with patients coming and thinking they know better than people who spent more than a decade in education because of what some chatbot told them.

autoexec 7 hours ago

Just an crazy idea, but if I were an unethical AI company that wanted to make better AI generated images of people's bodies, I might be tempted to offer very cheap full body scans in an unregulated fancy looking pop-up "med spa" where I could just use my AI to generate fake but impressive medical-looking pictures and then tell everyone who came in the results were inconclusive and they should get themselves checked out by an actual doctor in a hospital "just in case".

Maybe I'd even underpay a few people in developing countries with experience reading ultrasounds to check over the images so that if the humans detected anything suspicious I could give my sucker/client something more specific to tell their doctor about. That'd probably get me some good PR on social media as people post about how my fancy spa found their massive tumor or whatever.

Then I'd use their body scans as training data for my image generating AI. The waivers I'd have people sign to use the service would make sure that I wasn't at risk of any thorny legal issues from the use of all those images for training unlike the rampant copyright infringement method I'd been using previously and would also make sure I couldn't be held responsible for anything my scans found or didn't find.

Less cynically, maybe this thing will be nothing at all like that and one day it'll end up being used by real doctors in actual hospitals and save a bunch of lives or something. Who knows.