Google CEO, Sundar Pichai has announced PaLM 2 large language model (LLM), with improved multilingual reasoning and coding capabilities. The company said that the model is trained on 100 languages and performs a broad range of tasks.
Pichai highlighted that the AI model will be available in Workspace apps, Med-PaLM for medical uses and Sec-PaLM for security. A report has now said that Google has been testing an AI chatbot that will expertly answer medical questions.
According to The Verge report (via The Wall Street Journal), Med-PaLM 2 has been in testing at the Mayo Clinic research hospital, a non-profit organisation based in the US, among others since April.
According to Corrado, he would not want it to be a part of his own family’s “healthcare journey”, but he believed Med-PaLM 2 “takes the places in healthcare where AI can be beneficial and expands them by 10-fold”.
Is Med-PaLM better than other AI chatbots?
According to Google, Med-PaLM 2 will be better at healthcare conversations than general chat bots such as Bard, Bing and ChatGPT. Med-PaLM is trained on a curated set of medical expert demonstrations.
The report also mentioned that the customers who will be testing Med-PaLM 2 will control their data. The data will also be encrypted and Google won’t have access to it.
Google needs data to train its AI chatbot models and this week, a report said that the company updated its policy saying that it will use all available public data to train Bard and other AI models.
Google spokesperson, Christa Muldoon said, “Our privacy policy has long been transparent that Google uses publicly available information from the open web to train language models for services like Google Translate.”