CryptoNewsBot · @cryptonewsbot
653 followers · 33079 posts · Server schleuss.online

What is QuillBot, and how do I use it? - QuillBot is an AI-powered writing tool that helps users improve t... - cointelegraph.com/news/what-is

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Last updated 1 year ago

CryptoNewsBot · @cryptonewsbot
551 followers · 29246 posts · Server schleuss.online

TITLE: Criteria for an AI to write psychotherapy chart notes (or medical chart notes)

Note: Reposting to get it out to a few additional groups.

I am informed that a new product called has entered the market. It's mission is to write psychotherapy notes for clinicians AND to gather a non-identifiable dataset for research into clinical best practices.

I have no firm opinion yet on Mentalyc, but it's expensive ($39-$69 per month per clinician) and I'd personally need to know a lot more about what's in that dataset and who is benefiting from it.

**So I'm asking the community for thoughts on what acceptable ethical and practical criteria would be for an AI to write psychotherapy notes or medical notes.**

Here are MY thoughts so far:

1) REQUIRED: The AI either:
1a) Invents NOTHING and takes 100% of the information in the note from the clinician, or

1b) Prompts the clinician for additional symptoms often present in the condition before writing the note, or

1c) Presents a very clear information page before writing that lets the clinician approve, delete, or modify anything the AI got creative with and was not told explicitly to include. (So, for example, in an experiment with Bard a clinician found that Bard added sleep problems as an invented symptom to a SOAP note for a person with depression and anxiety. This is a non-bizarre symptom addition that makes lots of sense, is very likely, but would have to be approved as valid for the person in question.)

2) OPTIONAL: The AI is on MY computer and NOT reporting anything back to the Internet. This will not be on everyone's list, but I've seen too many subcontractors playing loose with the definition of (medical privacy) and there is more money to be made in data sales than clinician subscriptions to an AI.

3) OPTIONAL: Inexpensive (There are several free AI tools emerging.)

4) OPTIONAL: Open Source

5) Inputting data to the AI to write the note is less work than just writing the note personally. (Maybe a complex tablet-based clickable form? But then, a pretty high percentage of a note can be in a clickable form format anyway.)

6) The AI does NOT record the entire session and then write a note based upon what was said. (It might accept dictation of note directions sort of like doctors dictate notes to transcribers today.)

I think I may be envisioning a checkbox and drop-down menu form along with a space for a clinician to write a few keywords and phrases, then the AI (on my laptop) takes this and writes a note -- possibly just a paragraph to go along with the already existing form in the official note. I think. It's early days in my thinking.

--
Michael Reeder, LCPC

@psychology
@socialpsych
@socialwork
@psychiatry
#

#mentalyc #baa #hipaa #bias #ethics #ethicalai #ai #collaborativehumanaisystems #humanawareai #chatbotgpt #bard #security #dataanalytics #artificialintelligence #copyai #simplified #writesonic #rytr #writecream #creaitorai #quillbot #grammarly #smartcopy #textblaze #privacy #psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy #research #soap #ehr #mentalhealth #technology #psychiatry #healthcare #medical #doctor

Last updated 1 year ago

TITLE: Criteria for an AI to write psychotherapy chart notes (or medical chart notes)

I am informed that a new product called has entered the market. It's mission is to write psychotherapy notes for clinicians AND to gather a non-identifiable dataset for research into clinical best practices.

I have no firm opinion yet on Mentalyc, but it's expensive ($39-$69 per month per clinician) and I'd personally need to know a lot more about what's in that dataset and who is benefiting from it.

**So I'm asking the community for thoughts on what acceptable ethical and practical criteria would be for an AI to write psychotherapy notes or medical notes.**

Here are MY thoughts so far:

1) REQUIRED: The AI either:
1a) Invents NOTHING and takes 100% of the information in the note from the clinician, or

1b) Prompts the clinician for additional symptoms often present in the condition before writing the note, or

1c) Presents a very clear information page before writing that lets the clinician approve, delete, or modify anything the AI got creative with and was not told explicitly to include. (So, for example, in an experiment with Bard a clinician found that Bard added sleep problems as an invented symptom to a SOAP note for a person with depression and anxiety. This is a non-bizarre symptom addition that makes lots of sense, is very likely, but would have to be approved as valid for the person in question.)

2) OPTIONAL: The AI is on MY computer and NOT reporting anything back to the Internet. This will not be on everyone's list, but I've seen too many subcontractors playing loose with the definition of (medical privacy) and there is more money to be made in data sales than clinician subscriptions to an AI.

3) OPTIONAL: Inexpensive (There are several free AI tools emerging.)

4) OPTIONAL: Open Source

5) Inputting data to the AI to write the note is less work than just writing the note personally. (Maybe a complex tablet-based clickable form? But then, a pretty high percentage of a note can be in a clickable form format anyway.)

6) The AI does NOT record the entire session and then write a note based upon what was said. (It might accept dictation of note directions sort of like doctors dictate notes to transcribers today.)

I think I may be envisioning a checkbox and drop-down menu form along with a space for a clinician to write a few keywords and phrases, then the AI (on my laptop) takes this and writes a note -- possibly just a paragraph to go along with the already existing form in the official note. I think. It's early days in my thinking.

--
Michael Reeder, LCPC

@psychotherapist @psychotherapists @psychology.a.gup.pe @socialpsych.a.gup.pe @socialwork.a.gup.pe @psychiatry.a.gup.pe #

#mentalyc #baa #hipaa #bias #ethics #ethicalai #ai #collaborativehumanaisystems #humanawareai #chatbotgpt #bard #security #dataanalytics #artificialintelligence #copyai #simplified #writesonic #rytr #writecream #creaitorai #quillbot #grammarly #smartcopy #textblaze #privacy #psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy #research #soap #ehr #mentalhealth #technology #psychiatry #healthcare #medical #doctor

Last updated 1 year ago

TITLE: Criteria for an AI to write psychotherapy chart notes (or medical chart notes)

I am informed that a new product called has entered the market. It's mission is to write psychotherapy notes for clinicians AND to gather a non-identifiable dataset for research into clinical best practices.

I have no firm opinion yet on Mentalyc, but it's expensive ($39-$69 per month per clinician) and I'd personally need to know a lot more about what's in that dataset and who is benefiting from it.

**So I'm asking the community for thoughts on what acceptable ethical and practical criteria would be for an AI to write psychotherapy notes or medical notes.**

Here are MY thoughts so far:

1) REQUIRED: The AI either:
1a) Invents NOTHING and takes 100% of the information in the note from the clinician, or

1b) Prompts the clinician for additional symptoms often present in the condition before writing the note, or

1c) Presents a very clear information page before writing that lets the clinician approve, delete, or modify anything the AI got creative with and was not told explicitly to include. (So, for example, in an experiment with Bard a clinician found that Bard added sleep problems as an invented symptom to a SOAP note for a person with depression and anxiety. This is a non-bizarre symptom addition that makes lots of sense, is very likely, but would have to be approved as valid for the person in question.)

2) OPTIONAL: The AI is on MY computer and NOT reporting anything back to the Internet. This will not be on everyone's list, but I've seen too many subcontractors playing loose with the definition of (medical privacy) and there is more money to be made in data sales than clinician subscriptions to an AI.

3) OPTIONAL: Inexpensive (There are several free AI tools emerging.)

4) OPTIONAL: Open Source

5) Inputting data to the AI to write the note is less work than just writing the note personally. (Maybe a complex tablet-based clickable form? But then, a pretty high percentage of a note can be in a clickable form format anyway.)

6) The AI does NOT record the entire session and then write a note based upon what was said. (It might accept dictation of note directions sort of like doctors dictate notes to transcribers today.)

I think I may be envisioning a checkbox and drop-down menu form along with a space for a clinician to write a few keywords and phrases, then the AI (on my laptop) takes this and writes a note -- possibly just a paragraph to go along with the already existing form in the official note. I think. It's early days in my thinking.

--
Michael Reeder, LCPC

@psychotherapist.a.gup.pe @psychotherapists.a.gup.pe @psychology.a.gup.pe @socialpsych.a.gup.pe @socialwork.a.gup.pe @psychiatry.a.gup.pe #

#mentalyc #baa #hipaa #bias #ethics #ethicalai #ai #collaborativehumanaisystems #humanawareai #chatbotgpt #bard #security #dataanalytics #artificialintelligence #copyai #simplified #writesonic #rytr #writecream #creaitorai #quillbot #grammarly #smartcopy #textblaze #privacy #psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy #research #soap #ehr #mentalhealth #technology #psychiatry #healthcare #medical #doctor

Last updated 1 year ago

Norobiik · @Norobiik
254 followers · 4066 posts · Server noc.social

I often use 's (quillbot.com) to extract compact & streamlined summaries from key paragraphs in the articles posted to . Works much faster & comes up with better summaries than BUT you still have to check whether important key words or phrases were omitted.

No getting around reading & digesting the whole article to get the nuances right, tools are useful but not in the driver's seat.

#generativeAI #bingai #mastodon #summarizer #quillbot

Last updated 1 year ago

Christian · @teachpaperless
274 followers · 993 posts · Server mastodon.nu

Anyone got any more suggestions than this list that I've ripped off of the 🐦 ?

"AI copywriting tools to check out:

1. Chat GPT - Research
2. - Paraphrasing
3. - Hooks and outlines
4. - Grammar/spelling
5. - Conciseness/clarity
6. Power Thesaurus - Thesaurus
7. Tweet Hunter - Content creation

What else?"

Via twitter.com/writingtoriches/st

#tweethunter #powerthesarus #chatgpt #hemingway #grammarly #storylab #quillbot

Last updated 1 year ago

Fridley · @Fridley
228 followers · 925 posts · Server hachyderm.io

I suppose it was only a matter of time, but I just saw my youngest using to help him "fix" his English essay. While it states that it is not AI (in the way that is), as a "full-sentence thesaurus" I wonder how much of a crutch something like this could become. Clearly he won't be able to use it in exams, but arguing with him about how he shouldn't use this generations calculator seems somewhat pointless.

#quillbot #chatgpt #strangenewworld

Last updated 1 year ago

Dream Wishes 3 · @dreamwishes3
149 followers · 1383 posts · Server equestria.social

@thelettuceman

On that end, what you're watching out for is It's an AI rewriting / rephrasing bot that currently evades AI writing detectors. Meaning there's no safeguards to block it specifically right now. IIRC Google does deprioratize AI content if it detects it.

@gsuberland

#quillbot

Last updated 1 year ago

dreamwishes3 · @dreamwishes3
146 followers · 1320 posts · Server equestria.social

@gsuberland

Where I'm really expecting the to ruin the internet is in the content mills. I tried writing for one once, they pay you a penny a word or so and you try to write all these articles as fast as you can.

I wasn't the best at it, but after looking over the jobs, we were literally writing the shit pages that people were using to pad websites, not quality content.

Now that there's to go along with ChatGPT, I can see people churning out a nightmarish amount of crap.

#chatgpt #quillbot

Last updated 1 year ago

· @yangharrylg
877 followers · 37614 posts · Server donotban.com

Hui Zheng
@xyz98
·
16h
母语非英语者如何快速写一篇满意的英文文章?可尝试用如下pipeline:
1. 用母语写下梗概,用 扩充
2. 用 译成英文
3. 将英文用 润色加工
4. 最后用 定稿

#chatgpt #deepl #quillbot #grammerly

Last updated 2 years ago

GrassBlock :Bhole: · @blockcao
17 followers · 327 posts · Server masto.ai

草方块 in 🌏 / @Grass_block_cn
RT by @Grass_block_cn: 母语非英语者如何快速写一篇满意的英文文章?可尝试用如下pipeline:
1. 用母语写下梗概,用 扩充
2. 用 译成英文
3. 将英文用 润色加工
4. 最后用 定稿

Posted in t.me/realGrassblock

#chatgpt #deepl #quillbot #grammerly

Last updated 2 years ago

Arlia Étoile · @arlia
136 followers · 2451 posts · Server alive.bar

RT @xyz98@twitter.com

母语非英语者如何快速写一篇满意的英文文章?可尝试用如下pipeline:
1. 用母语写下梗概,用 扩充
2. 用 译成英文
3. 将英文用 润色加工
4. 最后用 定稿

🐦🔗: twitter.com/xyz98/status/16077

#chatgpt #deepl #quillbot #grammerly

Last updated 2 years ago

xinbenlv · @xinbenlv
8 followers · 330 posts · Server umet.us

RT @xyz98@twitter.com

母语非英语者如何快速写一篇满意的英文文章?可尝试用如下pipeline:
1. 用母语写下梗概,用 扩充
2. 用 译成英文
3. 将英文用 润色加工
4. 最后用 定稿

🐦🔗: twitter.com/xyz98/status/16077

#ChatGPT #deepl #quillbot #grammerly

Last updated 2 years ago

Dreta · @dreta
15 followers · 117 posts · Server mastodon.social

Gosh this is kinda creepy.

#quillbot #english #grammar #life

Last updated 2 years ago

Adam Grant · @nicegoingadam
381 followers · 302 posts · Server mastodon.online

Quillbot.com is an AI tool that can summarize, paraphrase, help you pull in research and so much more.

#quillbot #nlp #ml #ai

Last updated 2 years ago