• Minerva anestesiologica · Sep 2023

    Review

    Artificial intelligence and "the Art of Kintsugi" in Anesthesiology: ten influential papers for clinical users.

    • Valentina Bellini, Michele Russo, Roberto Lanza, Tania Domenichetti, Christian Compagnone, Salvatore M Maggiore, Gianmaria Cammarota, Paolo Pelosi, Luigi Vetrugno, and Elena G Bignami.
    • Unit of Anesthesiology, Division of Critical Care and Pain Medicine, Department of Medicine and Surgery, University of Parma, Parma, Italy.
    • Minerva Anestesiol. 2023 Sep 1; 89 (9): 804811804-811.

    AbstractArtificial intelligence refers to the simulation of human intelligence in machines that are programmed to think like humans and mimic their actions. In the present review we chose ten influential papers from the last five years and through Kintsugi, shed the light on recent evolution of artificial intelligence in anesthesiology. A comprehensive search in in Medline, Embase, Web of Science and Scopus databases was conducted. Each author searched the databases independently and created a list of six articles that influenced their clinical practice during this period, with a focus on their area of competence. During a subsequent step, each researcher presented his own list and most cited papers were selected to create the final collection of ten articles. In recent years purely methodological works with a cryptic technology (black-box) represented by the intact and static vessel, translated to a "modern artificial intelligence" in clinical practice and comprehensibility (glass-box). The purposes of this review are to explore the ten most cited papers about artificial intelligence in anesthesiology and to understand how and when it should be integrated in clinical practice.

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