Artificial intelligencecould reduce the threat of future viral pandemics, according to the researchers who have developed a machine learning-based early warning system.

Advertisement

The scientists from the Scripps Research Institute have trained the system totrack the emergence and evolution of epidemic viruses– like theSARS-CoV-2 variants.

This system could be used to track viral pandemics in the future, using an ‘unprecedented’ approach – according to the paper’s senior authorProfessor William Balch. “There are rules of pandemic virusevolutionthat we have not understood but can be discovered,” he said.

In a new paper published inCell Patterns, the scientists show that this system could have predicted the emergence of new COVID variants weeks before the World Health Organisation (WHO) designated them asthreats.

“One of the big lessons of this work is that it is important to take into account not just a few prominent variants, but also the tens of thousands of other undesignated variants, which we call the ‘variant dark matter’,” said Balch.

The AI was able to identify the key variants emerging from the ‘dark matter’, meaning those that significantly affected viral spread and mortality rates.

When applying the AI to data from the COVID pandemic, the machine was able to track genetic changes in the variants, as well as the virus’ adaptations to lockdowns, mask wearing,新疫苗, increasing human immunity, and competition between different variants.

The scientists hope their findings show that similar early warning systems could track the evolution of future viral pandemics in real-time. This could help scientists to predict increases in infection rates in time to prepare countermeasures, such mask wearing and healthcare service provisions.

The AI could also help in the race to find treatments and vaccines during pandemics, as the system also identified key COVID proteins and their roles in the evolution of the pandemic.

“This system and its underlying technical methods have many possible future applications,” saidDr Ben Calverley, co-first author of the study.

Read more:

Advertisement

Authors

个人的形象News Editor Noa Leach
Noa Leach News editor, BBC Science Focus

Noa Leach is the News editor at BBC Science Focus. With an MPhil degree in Criticism & Culture from the University of Cambridge, Noa has studied cultural responses to the climate crisis, wildlife, and toxicity. Before joining BBC Science Focus, Noa was the Editor of The Wildlife Trust BCN’s magazine Local Wildlife. Her writing has been shortlisted for the Future Places Environmental Essay Prize.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement