As per prominent AWS executive,
generative AI has the actual potential to simplify a lot of
unstructured data that is languishing in silos in public sector organizations throughout the world, including India.
Dave Levy, vice president of AWS Worldwide Public Sector, mentioned during the AWS re:Invent 2023 conference that these are early days for GenAI, particularly with the public sector, as organisations start to think about what are the use cases while some are already doing a few things with respect to GenAI that are very promising and very exciting, as per economic times.
"We are trying to understand what are going to be various applications of generative AI - How is it going to benefit citizens, how can we help improve research, how can decision makers make better decisions with data with respect to GenAI," Levy said.
There are several possibilities in the Indian public sector, notably in healthcare, where generative AI may assist provide outcomes to patients more quickly.
"We have examples of customers that are able to produce discharge reports faster to free up physicians, to allow them to work with patients and care for patients and do things so that they're not bogged down in the administrative work," Levy said.
Hoppr, an
AI healthtech firm, has just launched Grace, a multi-modal foundation model for medical imaging powered by AWS.
Grace is a first-of-its-kind
business-to-business foundation model that enables image-to-image and text-to-image learning across all medical imaging modalities, including X-rays, CT scans, MRIs, and echocardiograms.
According to Levy, GenAI has the ability to alter citizen experiences, offer previously unseen applications, and assist organizations and individuals in reaching new levels of productivity, among other things.