Toggle light / dark theme

DeepSeek withholds latest AI model from US chipmakers including Nvidia, sources say

SAN FRANCISCO/SINGAPORE — DeepSeek, the Chinese artificial intelligence lab whose low-cost model rattled global markets last year, has not shown US chipmakers its upcoming flagship model for performance optimization, two sources familiar with the matter said, breaking from standard industry practice ahead of a major model update.

Instead, the lab, which is expected to launch its next major update, V4, granted early access to domestic suppliers, including Huawei Technologies, the sources said.

AI developers typically share pre-release versions of major models with leading chipmakers such as Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices to ensure their software performs efficiently on widely used hardware. DeepSeek has previously worked closely with Nvidia’s technical staff.

Foundation Models Meet Medical Image Interpretation

In contrast, traditional deep learning methods in the medical domain have long been constrained by scarce annotations data, weak cross-modal semantic correlation, and insufficient generalization capabilities. FMs can effectively alleviate these issues by extracting semantic representations from large-scale unlabeled data, reducing dependence on expert annotations, and enhancing cross-modal understanding and transferability [7]. This provides technical support to address challenges such as long-tail distributions, data scarcity, and modality imbalance, thereby promoting a shift in medical decision-making from experience-driven to data-driven approaches.

Unlike traditional specialist models such as nnU-Net [8], which are typically designed for a single modality and specific tasks, FMs emphasize modality unification and task generalization, enabling cross-domain transfer and knowledge sharing. With mechanisms such as prompt engineering and PEFT, these models support few-shot and even zero-shot transfer (ZST). For example, Med-PaLM [9] is based on a unified medical pretraining model, which can generate structured pathology reports and perform lesion localization from medical images. It effectively overcomes the limitations of traditional methods that require separate architectures for different tasks, significantly improving modeling efficiency and system integration. Driven by such unified model architecture, medical AI systems are evolving toward greater generality and reusability.

Despite these advancements, the unique characteristics of the medical domain pose multiple challenges to the application of FMs. On one hand, medical data are highly heterogeneous, with pronounced differences in resolution, contrast, and noise distribution across imaging modalities such as computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and ultrasound [10]. This limits the ability of traditional single-modality pretraining strategies to achieve effective cross-domain knowledge integration. On the other hand, clinical applications demand higher standards for model performance. Clinical decision-making relies on interpretable diagnostic evidence, yet pretraining models often behave as “black boxes”, limiting their clinical traceability [11]. In addition, the long-tail distribution of rare diseases poses fairness challenges for model generalization [12].

Association of Systemic Inflammatory Markers With Cerebral Small Vessel Disease ProgressionA Community-Based Prospective Study

This study investigated the associations between neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio, monocyte-to-lymphocyte ratio, and systemic immune-inflammation index with progression of CSVD.


This website uses a security service to protect against malicious bots. This page is displayed while the website verifies you are not a bot.

Hume on suicide

Anyone interested in the morality of suicide reads David Hume’s essay on the subject even today. There are numerous reasons for this, but the central one is that it sets up the starting point for contemporary debate about the morality of suicide, namely, the debate about whether some condition of life could present one with a morally acceptable reason for autonomously deciding to end one’s life. We shall only be able to have this debate if we think that at least some acts of suicide can be moral, and we shall only be able to think this if we give up the blanket condemnation of suicide that theology has put in place. I look at this strategy of argument in the context of the wider eighteenth-century attempt to develop a non-theologically based ethic. The result in Hume’s case is a very modern tract on suicide, with voluntariness and autonomy to the fore and with reflection on the condition of one’s life and one’s desire to carry on living a life in that condition the motivating circumstance.

PubMed Disclaimer

What Can 50-Year-Old Chatbots Teach Us About Clinical Applications of AI?

Can a large language model (LLM) provide insights on the history of chatbots and their clinical applications? 🤖

In this episode of JAMA+ AI Conversations, JAMA+ AI Editor in Chief Roy Perlis, MD, MSc, interviews OpenAI’s ChatGPT (GPT-4o, voice mode) about the development and legacy of the first clinical chatbots, ELIZA and PARRY.

The discussion explores differing perspectives of their creators, as well as how foundational debates about technology and ethics continue to inform the present landscape of AI in mental health care.

🎧 Listen now.


JAMA+ AI Editor in Chief Roy Perlis, MD, MSc, conducted an interview with ChatGPT about the history of chatbots and their clinical applications, for JAMA+ AI Conversations.

AI Finds Life Shortening Hormone Disorder Using Only Hand Photos

A privacy-first AI can diagnose a life-shortening hormone disorder—just from a photo of your hand.

Researchers at Kobe University have developed an artificial intelligence system that can identify a rare endocrine disorder by examining photos of the back of a person’s hand and their clenched fist. By avoiding facial images, the approach was designed with privacy in mind. The team believes this tool could help doctors refer patients to specialists more efficiently and help narrow gaps in access to care.

Acromegaly and Delayed Diagnosis.

NIK-driven IL-23 production by myeloid cells is a key factor in the development of autoimmune inflammation

Nishada Ramphal, Ari Waisman et al. (Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz) reveal that NIK drives neuroantigen-specific T cell priming by regulating antigen presentation and IL-23 production, identifying NIK as a key orchestrator of myeloid-driven CNS autoimmunity.

Neuroinflammation.


This website uses a security service to protect against malicious bots. This page is displayed while the website verifies you are not a bot.

AI Is The 21st Century Force Multiplier

Ease see my latest Forbes article and have a great weekend! Chuck Brooks by Chuck Brooks.

#artificialIntelligence #ai #future #tech Forbes


AI is redefining power, productivity, security, and sovereignty. Dual-use, convergent, and autonomous AI is the 21st-century force multiplier. Not only is technology advancing, but civilization is about to change.

The 1956 Dartmouth Conference invented the term “artificial intelligence.” Alan Turing and other pioneers shaped the conceptualization of AI. The first systems used symbolic logic and determinism. Certain expert systems excelled but struggled in dynamic, uncertain environments. Fragility, computational capacity, and data accessibility caused “AI winters.”

⚖️ We Are All Middle Managers of Aliens Now: On the 2026 International AI Safety Report — and why you should read it

Review of International AI Safety Report 2026.


Heliox unpacks the 2026 International AI Safety Report — the definitive global scientific consensus on AI risk — in forty minutes of evidence-grounded, empathetically framed conversation. From jagged AI genius to geopolitical fracture to cognitive atrophy, this episode makes the most consequential technology document of 2026 genuinely accessible.

/* */