HealthTexas Provider NetworkOrthopedic Associates Of Dallas 4716 Alliance Blvd STE 600, Plano, TX 75093 4698007200 (phone), 4698007210 (fax)
Education:
Medical School Washington University School of Medicine Graduated: 2007
Procedures:
Arthrocentesis Lower Arm/Elbow/Wrist Fractures and Dislocations
Conditions:
Fractures, Dislocations, Derangement, and Sprains Lateral Epicondylitis Osteoarthritis Rotator Cuff Syndrome and Allied Disorders
Languages:
English Spanish
Description:
Dr. Chu graduated from the Washington University School of Medicine in 2007. She works in Plano, TX and 2 other locations and specializes in Orthopaedic Surgery and Hand Surgery. Dr. Chu is affiliated with Baylor Medical Center At Uptown, Baylor University Medical Center and Medical City Dallas Hospital.
Thomas Jefferson Public School 22 Flushing NY 1988-1992, Flushing Heights Public School 163 Flushing NY 1992-1993, Highlands Elementary School Sugar Land TX 1993-1994, Dulles Junior High School Sugar Land TX 1994-1997
The biggest thing is disease X has these symptoms, disease Y shares these symptoms, but does not have something else. So the negation becomes very, very important, IBM research scientist Jennifer Chu-Carroll said.
Jennifer Chu-Carroll is one of the scientists who helped develop Watson. She said that perhaps the biggest misconception about Watson is that it is using the same search technology as Google or Bing. She said many people don't "appreciate the difference between typing in two keywords, getting back 1
Digitally scanning or storing books is generally considered a copyright infringement if the person hasnt gotten permission to. The question is moot in Watsons case since IBM chose to obey licensing rules. "If we don't have a license, we don't have it," Jennifer Chu-Carroll, an IBM researcher on the Watson project, told InfoWorld.
"I think Watson has the potential to transform the way people interact with computers," said Jennifer Chu-Carroll, an IBM researcher working on the project, told Computerworld. "Watson is a significant step, allowing people to interact with a computer as they would a human being. Watson doesn't give
It takes Watson an average of three seconds to answer a question, said Jennifer Chu-Carroll, a research staff member and manager at the IBM T.J. Watson Research Center. And it looks through a database of over 1 million books.
Much of the power comes from IBM's carefully curated collection of data. Jennifer Chu-Carroll, one of the scientists who has worked on the project since it began over four years ago, says that Watson excels, predictably enough, when the answer is a detail stored in its database.
Date: Feb 16, 2011
Source: Google
IBM's Watson's ability to converse is a huge advance for AI research
"I think Watson has the potential to transform the way people interact with computers," said Jennifer Chu-Carroll, an IBM researcher working on the project. "Watson is a significant step, allowing people to interact with a computer as they would a human being. Watson doesn't give you a list of docum