What Makes Up Your Mind reports on AI for Mental Health: Human Centered AI, Computer Vision Tools, and Passive Sensing – with Dr. Ehsan Adeli, which links to memory and focus.

This episode of What Makes Up Your Mind continues our mini-series on AI4MH, Stanford Psychiatry’s Special Initiative of the Chair, AI for Mental Health. This time, we delve into the newest frontiers of Human-Centered AI, Computer Vision Tools, Passive Sensing. Along with the meticulous training and testing of specialized Large Language Models for better and faster diagnoses of mental illnesses, our guest expert is also utilizing AI technology for catching the earliest, often undetected signs of cognitive decline with human trials already underway.Dr. Ehsan Adeli is a Stanford Assistant Professor of Psychiatry and, by courtesy, of Computer Science and of Biomedical Data Science. He co-directs the AI4MH Initiative, Directs the Stanford Translational Artificial Intelligence (STAI)… …read more

Why it matters

Memory and attention are practical topics because small changes in routine and environment can sometimes make concentration easier. For readers, the value is not in treating a single story as an answer, but in noticing the practical themes it raises for everyday wellbeing.

HOF perspective

A wellbeing-focused view would look at attention as something that can often be supported through routine, rehearsal, and calmer internal cues. The emphasis should stay on calm, practical support rather than claims of guaranteed change.

Practical takeaway

Choose one task today and remove one avoidable distraction before starting.

Read the original source

This is an original short commentary, not a reproduction of the source article. Read the original at What Makes Up Your Mind.

error: Content is protected.