Close Menu
TechurzTechurz
    What's Hot

    Snap alums unveil Ghost Angels fund

    May 30, 2026

    As the browser wars heat up, here are the hottest alternatives to Chrome and Safari in 2026

    May 30, 2026

    After Nvidia’s $20B not-acqui-hire, AI chip startup Groq reportedly raising $650M

    May 29, 2026
    X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp
    Tech Pulse
    • Snap alums unveil Ghost Angels fund
    • As the browser wars heat up, here are the hottest alternatives to Chrome and Safari in 2026
    • After Nvidia’s $20B not-acqui-hire, AI chip startup Groq reportedly raising $650M
    • After Nvidia’s $20B not-aqui-hire, AI chip startup Groq reportedly raising $650M
    • Cognition’s Scott Wu says AI coding agents shouldn’t replace humans
    X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp
    TechurzTechurz
    • Home
    • Tech Pulse
    • Future Tech
    • AI Systems
    • Cyber Reality
    • Disruption Lab
    • Signals
    TechurzTechurz
    Home - AI - Microsoft Says Its New AI System Diagnosed Patients 4 Times More Accurately Than Human Doctors
    AI

    Microsoft Says Its New AI System Diagnosed Patients 4 Times More Accurately Than Human Doctors

    TechurzBy TechurzJune 30, 2025Updated:May 10, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Microsoft Says Its New AI System Diagnosed Patients 4 Times More Accurately Than Human Doctors
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Microsoft has taken “a genuine step towards medical superintelligence,” says Mustafa Suleyman, CEO of the company’s artificial intelligence arm. The tech giant says its powerful new AI tool can diagnose disease four times more accurately and at significantly less cost than a panel of human physicians.

    The experiment tested whether the tool could correctly diagnose a patient with an ailment, mimicking work typically done by a human doctor.

    The Microsoft team used 304 case studies sourced from the New England Journal of Medicine to devise a test called the Sequential Diagnosis Benchmark (SDBench). A language model broke down each case into a step-by-step process that a doctor would perform in order to reach a diagnosis.

    Microsoft’s researchers then built a system called the MAI Diagnostic Orchestrator (MAI-DxO) that queries several leading AI models—including OpenAI’s GPT, Google’s Gemini, Anthropic’s Claude, Meta’s Llama, and xAI’s Grok—in a way that loosely mimics several human experts working together.

    In their experiment, MAI-DxO outperformed human doctors, achieving an accuracy of 80 percent compared to the doctors’ 20 percent. It also reduced costs by 20 percent by selecting less expensive tests and procedures.

    “This orchestration mechanism—multiple agents that work together in this chain-of-debate style—that’s what’s going to drive us closer to medical superintelligence,” Suleyman says.

    The company poached several Google AI researchers to help with the effort—yet another sign of an intensifying war for top AI expertise in the tech industry. Suleyman was previously an executive at Google working on AI.

    AI is already widely used in some parts of the US health care industry, including helping radiologists interpret scans. The latest multimodal AI models have the potential to act as more general diagnostic tools, though the use of AI in health care raises its own issues, particularly related to bias from training data that’s skewed toward particular demographics.

    Microsoft has not yet decided if it will try to commercialize the technology, but the same executive, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said the company could integrate it into Bing to help users diagnose ailments. The company could also develop tools to help medical experts improve or even automate patient care. “What you’ll see over the next couple of years is us doing more and more work proving these systems out in the real world,” Suleyman says.

    The project is the latest in a growing body of research showing how AI models can diagnose disease. In the last few years, both Microsoft and Google have published papers showing that large language models can accurately diagnose an ailment when given access to medical records.

    The new Microsoft research differs from previous work in that it more accurately replicates the way human physicians diagnose disease—by analyzing symptoms, ordering tests, and performing further analysis until a diagnosis is reached. Microsoft describes the way that it combined several frontier AI models as “a path to medical superintelligence,” in a blog post about the project today.

    The project also suggests that AI could help lower health care costs, a critical issue, particularly in the US. “Our model performs incredibly well, both getting to the diagnosis and getting to that diagnosis very cost effectively,” says Dominic King, a vice president at Microsoft who is involved with the project.

    accurately Diagnosed doctors human Microsoft patients system Times
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleScattered Spider shifts focus to airlines with strikes on Hawaiian and WestJet
    Next Article I replaced my Windows laptop with a ‘premium’ Chromebook – and can’t go back
    Techurz
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Opinion

    Marketing operating system Nectar Social raises $30M Series A led by Menlo

    May 17, 2026
    Opinion

    Microsoft hires the team of Sequoia-backed AI collaboration platform, Cove

    March 18, 2026
    Opinion

    Why these startup CEOs don’t think AI will replace human roles

    February 19, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Latest Tech Pulse

    College social app Fizz expands into grocery delivery

    September 3, 20252,289

    SolarSquare in talks to raise up to $60M as India’s rooftop solar market draws major VC interest

    May 23, 202620

    A Former Apple Luminary Sets Out to Create the Ultimate GPU Software

    September 25, 202518
    Stay In Touch
    • YouTube
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • LinkedIn

    Techurz helps readers stay ahead of digital change with clear, practical, future focused technology intelligence written today,searched tomorrow.

    X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp
    Company
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Our Authors / Editorial Team
    • Write For Us
    • Advertise
    Policy
    • Editorial Policy
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Affiliate Disclosure
    • Cookie Policy
    • Disclaimer
    • DMCA
    Explore
    • AI Systems
    • Cyber Reality
    • Future Tech
    • Disruption Lab
    • Signals
    • Tech Pulse
    • Sitemap

    Join the Techurz Brief

    The future does not arrive suddenly.
    Stay ahead with fast, sharp tech signals.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.