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Epistemic Rights and Responsibilities of Digital Simulacra for Biomedicine

Mildred K. Cho, Nicole Martinez‐Martin

2022The American Journal of Bioethics28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Big data and AI have enabled digital simulation for prediction of future health states or behaviors of specific individuals, populations or humans in general. “Digital simulacra” use multimodal datasets to develop computational models that are virtual representations of people or groups, generating predictions of how systems evolve and react to interventions over time. These include digital twins and virtual patients for in silico clinical trials, both of which seek to transform research and health care by speeding innovation and bridging the epistemic gap between population-based research findings and their application to the individual. Nevertheless, digital simulacra mark a major milestone on a trajectory to embrace the epistemic culture of data science and a potential abandonment of medical epistemological concepts of causality and representation. In doing so, “data first” approaches potentially shift moral attention from actual patients and principles, such as equity, to simulated patients and patient data.

Topics & Concepts

BiomedicineAbandonment (legal)EpistemologyDigital healthHealth careEquity (law)Representation (politics)Causality (physics)Data scienceMilestoneBridging (networking)Psychological interventionComputer scienceSociologyPsychologyPolitical sciencePoliticsGeneticsArchaeologyPhilosophyHistoryQuantum mechanicsPsychiatryPhysicsComputer networkBiologyLawArtificial Intelligence in Healthcare and EducationEthics in Clinical ResearchEthics and Social Impacts of AI
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