Raising Computers to Be Good Scientists

A team of UA researchers is sifting through thousands of research papers to improve treatment for cancer patients, one algorithm at a time

Written byUniversity of Arizona
| 3 min read
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Making sense of the new scientific data published every year — including well over a million cancer-related journal articles — is a tall order for the contemporary scientist.

Even if a scientist were capable of reading every article and memorizing its content, drawing connections to answer real-world questions would require supernatural cognition.

Figuring out how to actually read hundreds of thousands of scientific papers and apply their findings to real challenges, such as the treatment of cancer patients, is an arduous, uphill battle.  

But an associate professor in the University of Arizona's School of Information, Clayton Morrison, is doing just that, one algorithm at a time.

He wonders, as many others in his field do, if the solutions to big problems are already there, in extant data, but no one has been able to put it all together yet.

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