Latest news with #WilfordBrimley


The Guardian
13-05-2025
- Health
- The Guardian
FaceAge: the AI tool that can tell your biological age through one photo
Name: FaceAge. Age: New. Appearance: A computer that predicts how long you'll live. So, it will tell me when I'll die? No thanks. Wait, I haven't even explained it yet. Doesn't matter, it's still the most terrifying thing I've ever heard. No, give it a chance. FaceAge is only doing what doctors already do. Which is what? Visually assessing you to obtain a picture of your health. Oh, that doesn't sound so bad. But FaceAge can do it much more accurately, to the point that it can predict whether or not you'll survive treatment. No, I'm out again. I'll explain more. FaceAge is an AI tool created by scientists at Mass General Brigham in Boston. By looking at a photo of your face, it can determine your biological age as opposed to your chronological age. What does that mean? It means that everyone ages at different speeds. At the age of 50, for example, Paul Rudd had a biological age of 43, according to researchers. But at the same age, fellow actor Wilford Brimley had a biological age of 69. And why does this matter? People with older biological ages are less likely to tolerate an aggressive treatment such as radiotherapy. Repeat all that as if I'm an idiot. OK. The older your face looks, the worse things are for you. Great news for the prematurely grey, then. Actually, no. Things like grey hair and baldness are often red herrings. FaceAge can give a better picture of someone's health by assessing the skin folds on your mouth or the hollowing of your temples. Right, I'll just be off to obsessively scrutinise the state of my temples. No, this is a good thing. A diagnostic tool like this, used properly, could improve the quality of life of millions of people. Although the initial research was confined to cancer patients, scientists plan to test FaceAge with other conditions. I've recently had plastic surgery. Will FaceAge still work on me? Unsure, actually. The creators still need to check that. And what about people of colour? Ah, yes, about that. The model was primarily trained on white faces, so there's no real telling how well it can adapt to other skin tones. This is starting to sound dodgy. Just teething problems. Look how fast AI can improve. Last year, ChatGPT was a useless novelty. Now it's going to destroy almost every labour market on Earth. You'd have to assume that FaceAge will rapidly improve as well. That's reassuring. Yes. Before we know it, it'll be scanning your face and instantly making a chillingly objective judgment call on whether you deserve to live or die. My God, will it? No, of course not. Not yet, anyway. Do say: 'FaceAge is the new frontier of medical diagnostics.' Don't say: 'It says I'm going to die three seconds into the robot uprising of 2028.'


Irish Examiner
09-05-2025
- Health
- Irish Examiner
New study finds ‘simple selfie' can help predict patients' cancer survival
A selfie can be used as a tool to help doctors determine a patient's 'biological age' and judge how well they may respond to cancer treatment, a new study suggests. Because humans age at 'different rates' their physical appearance may help give insights into their so-called 'biological age' – how old a person is physiologically, academics said. The new FaceAge AI tool can estimate a person's biological age, as opposed to their actual age, by scanning an image of their face, a new study found. Our study now has shown for the first time that we can really use AI to turn a selfie into a real biomarker source of ageing. A person's biological age, which is a predictor of their overall health and can be a predictor of life expectancy, is based on many factors including lifestyle and genetics, researchers from Mass General Brigham in the US said. But they wanted to examine whether or not biological age could be examined based on how a person looks – similar to what doctors call an 'eyeball test' whereby certain judgments are made based on how a person looks, such as whether or not someone could undergo intensive cancer treatment based on how frail they appear to be. Researchers said they wanted to see whether they could 'go beyond' the 'subjective and manual' eyeball test by creating a 'deep learning' artificial intelligence (AI) tool which could assess 'simple selfies'. The new algorithm was trained using 59,000 photos. Actor Paul Rudd's biological age appeared to be much lower than his actual age (PA) 'Our study now has shown for the first time that we can really use AI to turn a selfie into a real biomarker source of ageing,' said Dr Hugo Aerts, corresponding author of the paper. He said the tool is low cost, can be used repeatedly over time and could be used to track an individual's biological age over 'months, years and decades'. 'The impact can be very large, because we now have a way to actually very easily monitor a patient's health status continuously and this could help us to better predict the risk of death or complications after, say, for example, a major surgery or other treatments,' he added. Explaining the tool, academics showed how it assessed the biological age of actors Paul Rudd and Wilford Brimley based on photographs of the men when they were both 50 years old. Rudd's biological age was calculated to be 42.6, while Brimley, who died in 2020, was assessed to have a biological age of 69. The new study, published in the journal Lancet Digital Health, saw the tool used on thousands of cancer patients. Wilford Brimley's face was used in the study (Alamy/PA) FaceAge was used on 6,200 patients with cancer using images taken at the start of their treatment. The academics found that the biological age of patients with cancer was, on average, five years older than chronological age. They also found that older FaceAge readings were associated with worse survival outcomes among patients with cancer, especially in people who had a FaceAge older than 85 years old. The authors concluded: 'Our results suggest that a deep learning model can estimate biological age from face photographs and thereby enhance survival prediction in patients with cancer.' Dr Ray Mak, co-senior author on the paper, added: 'We have demonstrated that AI can turn a simple face photo into an objective measure of biological age, that clinicians can use to personalised care for patients, like having another vital sign data point.' He said that it is 'another piece of the puzzle like vital signs, lab results or medical imaging'. But he added: 'We want to be clear that we view AI tools like FaceAge as assistance provide decision support and not replacements for clinician judgment.' More studies assessing FaceAge are under way, including whether it could be used for other conditions or diseases and what impact things like cosmetic surgery or Botox have on the tool.


Glasgow Times
09-05-2025
- Health
- Glasgow Times
New study finds ‘simple selfie' can help predict patients' cancer survival
Because humans age at 'different rates' their physical appearance may help give insights into their so-called 'biological age' – how old a person is physiologically, academics said. The new FaceAge AI tool can estimate a person's biological age, as opposed to their actual age, by scanning an image of their face, a new study found. A person's biological age, which is a predictor of their overall health and can be a predictor of life expectancy, is based on many factors including lifestyle and genetics, researchers from Mass General Brigham in the US said. But they wanted to examine whether or not biological age could be examined based on how a person looks – similar to what doctors call an 'eyeball test' whereby certain judgments are made based on how a person looks, such as whether or not someone could undergo intensive cancer treatment based on how frail they appear to be. Researchers said they wanted to see whether they could 'go beyond' the 'subjective and manual' eyeball test by creating a 'deep learning' artificial intelligence (AI) tool which could assess 'simple selfies'. The new algorithm was trained using 59,000 photos. Actor Paul Rudd's biological age appeared to be much lower than his actual age (PA) 'Our study now has shown for the first time that we can really use AI to turn a selfie into a real biomarker source of ageing,' said Dr Hugo Aerts, corresponding author of the paper. He said the tool is low cost, can be used repeatedly over time and could be used to track an individual's biological age over 'months, years and decades'. 'The impact can be very large, because we now have a way to actually very easily monitor a patient's health status continuously and this could help us to better predict the risk of death or complications after, say, for example, a major surgery or other treatments,' he added. Explaining the tool, academics showed how it assessed the biological age of actors Paul Rudd and Wilford Brimley based on photographs of the men when they were both 50 years old. Rudd's biological age was calculated to be 42.6, while Brimley, who died in 2020, was assessed to have a biological age of 69. The new study, published in the journal Lancet Digital Health, saw the tool used on thousands of cancer patients. Wilford Brimley's face was used in the study (Alamy/PA) FaceAge was used on 6,200 patients with cancer using images taken at the start of their treatment. The academics found that the biological age of patients with cancer was, on average, five years older than chronological age. They also found that older FaceAge readings were associated with worse survival outcomes among patients with cancer, especially in people who had a FaceAge older than 85 years old. The authors concluded: 'Our results suggest that a deep learning model can estimate biological age from face photographs and thereby enhance survival prediction in patients with cancer.' Dr Ray Mak, co-senior author on the paper, added: 'We have demonstrated that AI can turn a simple face photo into an objective measure of biological age, that clinicians can use to personalised care for patients, like having another vital sign data point.' He said that it is 'another piece of the puzzle like vital signs, lab results or medical imaging'. But he added: 'We want to be clear that we view AI tools like FaceAge as assistance provide decision support and not replacements for clinician judgment.' More studies assessing FaceAge are under way, including whether it could be used for other conditions or diseases and what impact things like cosmetic surgery or Botox have on the tool.

South Wales Argus
08-05-2025
- Health
- South Wales Argus
New study finds ‘simple selfie' can help predict patients' cancer survival
Because humans age at 'different rates' their physical appearance may help give insights into their so-called 'biological age' – how old a person is physiologically, academics said. The new FaceAge AI tool can estimate a person's biological age, as opposed to their actual age, by scanning an image of their face, a new study found. A person's biological age, which is a predictor of their overall health and can be a predictor of life expectancy, is based on many factors including lifestyle and genetics, researchers from Mass General Brigham in the US said. But they wanted to examine whether or not biological age could be examined based on how a person looks – similar to what doctors call an 'eyeball test' whereby certain judgments are made based on how a person looks, such as whether or not someone could undergo intensive cancer treatment based on how frail they appear to be. Researchers said they wanted to see whether they could 'go beyond' the 'subjective and manual' eyeball test by creating a 'deep learning' artificial intelligence (AI) tool which could assess 'simple selfies'. The new algorithm was trained using 59,000 photos. Actor Paul Rudd's biological age appeared to be much lower than his actual age (PA) 'Our study now has shown for the first time that we can really use AI to turn a selfie into a real biomarker source of ageing,' said Dr Hugo Aerts, corresponding author of the paper. He said the tool is low cost, can be used repeatedly over time and could be used to track an individual's biological age over 'months, years and decades'. 'The impact can be very large, because we now have a way to actually very easily monitor a patient's health status continuously and this could help us to better predict the risk of death or complications after, say, for example, a major surgery or other treatments,' he added. Explaining the tool, academics showed how it assessed the biological age of actors Paul Rudd and Wilford Brimley based on photographs of the men when they were both 50 years old. Rudd's biological age was calculated to be 42.6, while Brimley, who died in 2020, was assessed to have a biological age of 69. The new study, published in the journal Lancet Digital Health, saw the tool used on thousands of cancer patients. Wilford Brimley's face was used in the study (Alamy/PA) FaceAge was used on 6,200 patients with cancer using images taken at the start of their treatment. The academics found that the biological age of patients with cancer was, on average, five years older than chronological age. They also found that older FaceAge readings were associated with worse survival outcomes among patients with cancer, especially in people who had a FaceAge older than 85 years old. The authors concluded: 'Our results suggest that a deep learning model can estimate biological age from face photographs and thereby enhance survival prediction in patients with cancer.' Dr Ray Mak, co-senior author on the paper, added: 'We have demonstrated that AI can turn a simple face photo into an objective measure of biological age, that clinicians can use to personalised care for patients, like having another vital sign data point.' He said that it is 'another piece of the puzzle like vital signs, lab results or medical imaging'. But he added: 'We want to be clear that we view AI tools like FaceAge as assistance provide decision support and not replacements for clinician judgment.' More studies assessing FaceAge are under way, including whether it could be used for other conditions or diseases and what impact things like cosmetic surgery or Botox have on the tool.

Western Telegraph
08-05-2025
- Health
- Western Telegraph
New study finds ‘simple selfie' can help predict patients' cancer survival
Because humans age at 'different rates' their physical appearance may help give insights into their so-called 'biological age' – how old a person is physiologically, academics said. The new FaceAge AI tool can estimate a person's biological age, as opposed to their actual age, by scanning an image of their face, a new study found. A person's biological age, which is a predictor of their overall health and can be a predictor of life expectancy, is based on many factors including lifestyle and genetics, researchers from Mass General Brigham in the US said. But they wanted to examine whether or not biological age could be examined based on how a person looks – similar to what doctors call an 'eyeball test' whereby certain judgments are made based on how a person looks, such as whether or not someone could undergo intensive cancer treatment based on how frail they appear to be. Researchers said they wanted to see whether they could 'go beyond' the 'subjective and manual' eyeball test by creating a 'deep learning' artificial intelligence (AI) tool which could assess 'simple selfies'. The new algorithm was trained using 59,000 photos. Actor Paul Rudd's biological age appeared to be much lower than his actual age (PA) 'Our study now has shown for the first time that we can really use AI to turn a selfie into a real biomarker source of ageing,' said Dr Hugo Aerts, corresponding author of the paper. He said the tool is low cost, can be used repeatedly over time and could be used to track an individual's biological age over 'months, years and decades'. 'The impact can be very large, because we now have a way to actually very easily monitor a patient's health status continuously and this could help us to better predict the risk of death or complications after, say, for example, a major surgery or other treatments,' he added. Explaining the tool, academics showed how it assessed the biological age of actors Paul Rudd and Wilford Brimley based on photographs of the men when they were both 50 years old. Rudd's biological age was calculated to be 42.6, while Brimley, who died in 2020, was assessed to have a biological age of 69. The new study, published in the journal Lancet Digital Health, saw the tool used on thousands of cancer patients. Wilford Brimley's face was used in the study (Alamy/PA) FaceAge was used on 6,200 patients with cancer using images taken at the start of their treatment. The academics found that the biological age of patients with cancer was, on average, five years older than chronological age. They also found that older FaceAge readings were associated with worse survival outcomes among patients with cancer, especially in people who had a FaceAge older than 85 years old. The authors concluded: 'Our results suggest that a deep learning model can estimate biological age from face photographs and thereby enhance survival prediction in patients with cancer.' Dr Ray Mak, co-senior author on the paper, added: 'We have demonstrated that AI can turn a simple face photo into an objective measure of biological age, that clinicians can use to personalised care for patients, like having another vital sign data point.' He said that it is 'another piece of the puzzle like vital signs, lab results or medical imaging'. But he added: 'We want to be clear that we view AI tools like FaceAge as assistance provide decision support and not replacements for clinician judgment.' More studies assessing FaceAge are under way, including whether it could be used for other conditions or diseases and what impact things like cosmetic surgery or Botox have on the tool.