![Artificial intelligence can entrench disparities—here's what we must do](https://cdn.cancerletter.com/media/2018/11/metropolis-web.jpg)
![Artificial intelligence can entrench disparities—here's what we must do](https://cdn.cancerletter.com/media/2018/11/metropolis-web.jpg)
Cover Story
Free
By Kadija Ferryman and Robert A. Winn
Heinz Von Foerster, the renowned Austrian-American physicist and cybernetics scholar, declared that “information can be considered as order wrenched from disorder.1” Ever-increasing amounts of digital data and new computational tools promise that technological developments such as artificial intelligence (AI) will bring order, clarity, and new solutions in multiple areas—from transportation to criminal justice.
In Brief
![In Brief](https://cdn.cancerletter.com/media/2019/05/03155624/in-brief-3.jpg)
![In Brief](https://cdn.cancerletter.com/media/2019/05/03155624/in-brief-3.jpg)
Clinical Roundup
![Clinical Roundup](https://cdn.cancerletter.com/media/2019/05/03161627/clinical_roundup.jpg)
![Clinical Roundup](https://cdn.cancerletter.com/media/2019/05/03161627/clinical_roundup.jpg)
Drugs & Targets
![Drugs & Targets](https://cdn.cancerletter.com/media/2019/05/03161633/targets2.jpg)
![Drugs & Targets](https://cdn.cancerletter.com/media/2019/05/03161633/targets2.jpg)
Trending Stories
- Federal judge blocks Trump administration’s move to limit indirect costs to 15% for NIH-funded institutions
The move could gut academic cancer research - FDA grants Cytotron Breakthrough Device Designation for breast, liver and pancreatic cancers
- What Trump’s pick of RFK Jr. means for cancer: Epidemics, HPV, stunted research
Former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb expresses “deep concerns” - “Page Not Found:” HHS agencies purge web pages that hint at DEI, health equity, and gender
Medical group sues over removing “information used every day by health professions” - Beyond the $500B Stargate Project: The frontier of AI in oncology beckons
- Pediatric cancer research cut from spending legislation at last minute
Republicans quietly removed hard-won pediatric cancer bills