New research chair unlocks AI’s potential for drug development and diagnostic imaging
New research chair unlocks AI’s potential for drug development and diagnostic imaging
Publish Date: 2026-06-08 03:12:00
Source Domain: www.ualberta.ca
- Dr. Amber Simpson, a newly appointed Canada CIFAR AI chair at the University of Alberta, focuses on utilizing AI to improve human health, specifically in reducing animal testing in biomedicine.
- Her research involves developing precision-targeted drugs using computational drug modeling based on high-dimensional human health data.
- Simpson aims to reduce the number of drug failures in clinical trials by starting the development process from human data rather than animal testing.
- She was recently appointed to the Dianne and Irving Kipnes Health Research Institute and is enthusiastic about the potential of AI in cardiovascular disease and cancer diagnostic imaging.
- Simpson collaborates with other AI experts at the Alberta Machine Intelligence Institute, supported by a $30-million investment.
- She expects the first AI-developed drug breakthroughs to primarily come from cardiovascular disease and sees significant potential in diagnostic cancer imaging.
- AI tools like prediction algorithms in her lab help radiologists focus on patients who need further attention, especially in regions with a shortage of radiologists.
- Simpson plans to develop models tracking multiple data points over time to make more accurate and relevant predictions for patient care.
- She is optimistic that advancements in AI will demonstrate its beneficial applications in healthcare, potentially leading to another Nobel Prize in AI and health for the University of Alberta.