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Google’s cough analytics

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Hey, this is Saritha Rai, artificial intelligence reporter in Asia. Google got together last week wi

Hey, this is Saritha Rai, artificial intelligence reporter in Asia. Google got together last week with an Indian AI startup to roll out a bi [View in browser]( [Bloomberg]( Hey, this is Saritha Rai, artificial intelligence reporter in Asia. Google got together last week with an Indian AI startup to roll out a bioacoustics health-care model to detect disease from human sounds. Bioacou-what? Allow me to explain. But first... Three things you need to know today: • Nvidia produced strong results, but it wasn’t the blowout quarter that investors have [come to expect]( • Telegram CEO Pavel Durov was charged by French authorities in connection with crimes committed on [the messaging platform]( • OpenAI is close to raising money that would value the startup at [more than $100 billion]( AI that listens Bioacoustics is the thrilling combination of biology and acoustics, helping us gain insights from sounds produced by animals and humans. Generative AI, the kind of tech that brought ChatGPT to 200 million users worldwide, is now adding a new level of functionality to this field. One foundation AI model built by [Alphabet Inc.](bbg://securities/GOOGL%20US%20Equity)’s Google uses sound signals to predict early signs of disease, opening up a world of possibilities. The technology can ride in a smartphone and track high-risk populations in tricky geographies. Where expensive diagnostic hardware such as X-ray machines or technical expertise isn’t within easy reach, AI along with a handset’s microphone could come to the rescue. That AI system is already helping tackle the world’s top infectious killer. Nearly [4,500 people die daily]( and 30,000 fall ill with tuberculosis, according to the World Health Organization. It is treatable, but millions go undiagnosed. In India, the disease fells nearly a quarter-million people yearly, and early detection is key to halting its spread. Google trained its [foundation AI model]( with 300 million pieces of audio from around the world, including coughs, sniffles, sneezes and breathing. Two-second audio clips were amassed from non-copyrighted, publicly-viewable content such as YouTube videos and even cough sounds recorded in a hospital in Zambia, where patients came for TB screening. Body sounds are filled with information about our well being, containing near-imperceptible clues that can help screen, diagnose and manage health conditions. The data feeding Google’s HeAR (short for Health Acoustic Representations) AI model included 100 million cough sounds that now help detect TB. The AI tool loaded on a smartphone is easily carried to the remotest populations to screen for the disease. The AI detects early signs based on subtle differences in cough patterns, helping triage patients and lining them up for further investigation and treatment, said Shravya Shetty, Google’s Mountain View, California-based research director of engineering. The goal is to power the tools to help even people with limited training screen for respiratory illnesses, she says. The tech giant’s Indian collaborator, Hyderabad-based [Salcit Technologies]( is a respiratory health care AI startup. Salcit is using the AI model to improve the accuracy of TB diagnosis and lung health assessments by combining with its own machine learning AI called Swaasa, which is the word for breath in the ancient Indian language of Sanskrit. Leading Indian health care providers like Apollo Hospitals and the nonprofit Healing Fields Foundation are using Swaasa to screen people, including in remote areas. Salcit has India’s medical device regulator’s approval, a first for a software tool to be deployed as a medical device. In its mobile app, Swaasa allows users to upload a 10-second cough sample (just cough near your mobile) and test for diseases with a 94% accuracy, Salcit’s co-founder Manmohan Jain said. The cough sound is the equivalent of giving a blood sample, only this particular sonic sample is processed on the cloud rather than in a laboratory. The screening test retails at 200 rupees ($2.40), compared with a spirometry test that could cost 3,000 rupees at a clinic. But there are challenges. While the new tech is exciting doctors in the field by opening up a new frontier, it’s not easy to change routine clinical practices. The screening tool will need to find acceptance. There’s also the problem of ensuring audio samples don’t come with an abundance of background noise. Rural users, unfamiliar with technology, may be unable to record coughs on the app. Yet, the tech is finding supporters, including those like the [StopTB Partnership]( a UN-backed organization, which aims to end TB by 2030. In another bioacoustics venture, Google is [researching]( a model based on ultrasound for early breast cancer detection at the Chang Gung Memorial Hospital in Taiwan. The AI assists in lesion detection and Google aims to roll out it out globally, offering free breast cancer screening for populations that can’t afford costly mammograms. Neither of Google’s models is yet near commercialization. But sound-based generative AI systems could democratize early disease detection, making screening accessible, affordable and scalable. Montreal-based [Ubenwa]( has built a foundation model for infant cries, and interprets infant’s needs and health by analyzing the biomarkers in their cry sounds. And others are working on AI tools that can detect autism based on oohs, aahs and gurgling sounds. Voice and sound are the new frontiers in medicine, says Salcit’s Jain.—[Saritha Rai](mailto:srai33@bloomberg.net) The big story Social media companies in the US have been protected from responsibility for content posted by their users under a section of a federal law passed in 1996. The provision, [known as Section 230]( is now in question after an appellate court gave a Pennsylvania mother the right to sue TikTok over the death of her 10-year-old. The child accidentally strangled herself while mirroring a video promoted to her on TikTok. One to watch [Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang talks with Bloomberg’s Ed Ludlow in an exclusive interview after the chipmaker acknowledged during its earnings report that there have been production snags for its new Blackwell AI chip.]( Get fully charged The California state Assembly approved a controversial [artificial intelligence safety bill](. Salesforce boosted its profit forecast, satisfying investors who were concerned about [slowing revenue growth](. YouTube is showing gun videos to minors despite policy [rules against it](. CrowdStrike reported revenue that suggested it was bouncing back from a global IT meltdown last month caused by an update of the [company’s software](. More from Bloomberg Get Bloomberg Tech weeklies in your inbox: - [Cyber Bulletin]( for coverage of the shadow world of hackers and cyber-espionage - [Game On]( for reporting on the video game business - [Power On]( for Apple scoops, consumer tech news and more - [Screentime]( for a front-row seat to the collision of Hollywood and Silicon Valley - [Soundbite]( for reporting on podcasting, the music industry and audio trends - [Q&AI]( for answers to all your questions about AI Follow Us Stay updated by saving our new email address Our email address is changing, which means you’ll be receiving this newsletter from noreply@news.bloomberg.com. Here’s how to update your contacts to ensure you continue receiving it: - Gmail: Open an email from Bloomberg, click the three dots in the top right corner, select “Mark as important.” - Outlook: Right-click on Bloomberg’s email address and select “Add to Outlook Contacts.” - Apple Mail: Open the email, click on Bloomberg’s email address, and select “Add to Contacts” or “Add to VIPs.” - Yahoo Mail: Open an email from Bloomberg, hover over the email address, click “Add to Contacts.” Like getting this newsletter? [Subscribe to Bloomberg.com]( for unlimited access to trusted, data-driven journalism and subscriber-only insights. Want to sponsor this newsletter? [Get in touch here](. You received this message because you are subscribed to Bloomberg's Tech Daily newsletter. If a friend forwarded you this message, [sign up here]( to get it in your inbox. 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