BBC 6 minute English-A future without doctors
Transcript of the podcast
Note: This is not a word-for-word transcript
.Neil: Hello. This is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English. I’m Neil
.Sam: And I’m Sam
?Neil: Are you feeling well, Sam? No headache or sore throat
?Sam: No, I feel fine thanks, Neil. Why do you ask
Neil: Well, I’ve been reading some inspirational stories about the doctors and nurses fighting Covid. When I was a boy, I always dreamed of becoming a doctor
?Sam: Ah, I see. Have you ever been in hospital
Neil: Yes, I have, and I remember the nurse’s bedside manner – you know, the kind and caring way that doctors and nurses treat people who are ill
Sam: Nowadays more and more of the jobs that humans do are being carried out by machines. But I doubt that a doctor’s bedside manner could easily be replaced by a robot
Neil: In this programme, we’ll be discussing whether the revolution in artificial intelligence, often shortened to ‘AI’, could replace human doctors and nurses. We’ll be asking: can you imagine a future without doctors
Sam: In fact, machines are already doing some of the jobs traditionally done by doctors – scanning people’s bodies to detect skin cancer, for example
Neil: Yes, that’s true, Sam, and it links to my quiz question which is about human skin. It’s a well-known fact that skin is the human body’s largest organ – but how much skin does the average adult have? Is it ?,a) 2 square metres ,b) 3 square metres? or ?c) 4 square metres
Sam: Of course our skin gets loose as we age but I can’t believe there’s 3 square metres of it! I’ll say the answer is a) 2 square metres
Neil: OK, we’ll find out if that’s correct later. Every year in the UK over 5 million people are treated for skin cancer. Catch it early and your chances of survival are increased
Sam: Usually a skin specialist, or dermatologist, will examine your skin using a handheld microscope. But in 2017, a team of researchers at Stanford Medical School made an exciting announcement
Neil: Here’s Oxford University researcher Daniel Susskind, telling BBC World Service programme, The Big Idea, what the medics at Stanford had invented
Daniel Susskind
A team of researchers at Stamford last year announced the development of a system that, if you give it a photo of a freckle it can tell you as accurately as twenty-one leading dermatologists whether or not that freckle is cancerous
Sam: The Stanford medical team had invented an AI system to analyse freckles – small brown spots found on people’s skin, especially on pale skin
Neil: As it turned out the AI programme was better than human doctors at telling whether a freckle was harmless or cancerous – connected to some type of cancer
Sam: So, it seems that artificial intelligence is already replacing humans when it comes to detecting cancer – and doing a better job of it
Neil: But Daniel Susskind isn’t convinced. One reason is that AI systems still need humans to programme them – and as it turns out, knowing exactly how doctors detect illness remains something of a mystery
:Sam: Here’s Daniel Susskind again in conversation with BBC World Service programme, The Big Idea
Daniel Susskind
If you ask a doctor how it is they make a diagnosis, they might be able to point you to particularly revealing parts of a reference book or give you a few rules of thumb, but ultimately they’d struggle… they’d say again it requires things like creativity and judgment, and these things are very difficult to articulate – and so traditionally it’s been thought very hard to automate – if a human being can’t explain how they do these special things, where on earth do we begin in writing instructions for a machine to follow
Neil: Most doctors find it difficult to explain how they make a diagnosis – their judgement about what someone’s particular sickness is, made by examining them
Sam: Diagnosing someone’s illness is complicated but there are some rules of thumb. A rule of thumb is a practical but approximate way of doing something
.Neil: For example, when cooking, a good rule of thumb is two portions of water to one portion of rice
Sam: Exactly. And because identifying sickness is so difficult, Daniel says “where on earth do we begin writing instructions for a machine?” We use phrases like where, how or what on earth to show feelings like anger, surprise or disbelief
?’Neil: I might show surprise by asking Sam, ‘how on earth did you know the answer to that
Sam: Ha ha! I guess you’re talking about your quiz question, Neil? And you needn’t be so surprised – I’m naturally brainy
Neil: Of course you are. In my quiz question I asked Sam how much skin there is on an adult human body
.Sam: And I said it was a) 2 square metres
Neil: Which was… the correct answer! With your brains I think you’d make a good doctor, Sam, and I’m sure you’d have a good bedside manner too
Sam: You mean, the kind and caring way that doctors and nurses treat their patients. OK, let’s recap the rest of the vocabulary, starting with freckle – a small brown spot on someone’s skin
.Neil: Freckles are usually harmless, but some skin spots can be cancerous – connected to cancer
.Sam: A doctor’s diagnosis is their judgement about what someone’s particular sickness or disease is
.Neil: A rule of thumb is a useful but approximate way of doing or measuring something
Sam: And finally, we use phrases like where on earth..? as a way to show emotions like anger, surprise or disbelief
Neil: That’s all for this programme but join us for the next edition of 6 Minute English when we’ll discuss another trending topic and the related vocabulary
!Sam: Why on earth would you miss it? Goodbye for now
!Neil: Goodbye
حسین
BBC ENGLISH عالیه فقط کاش امریکن بود .
آفرینش
با سلام و احترام
حسین عزیز یکی از دلایل محبوبیت این پادکست اکسنت بریتیش گویندگانش هست.
ولی ما برای اکسنت امریکن هم سری پادکست های American Stories رو داریم میذاریم.تازه رادیو آیلتس آفرینش رو هم میتونین گوش کنین. 🙂