3-D representation of the human body
Envision this...when you visit the doctor, your 12-inch stack of paper medical
records will have morphed into a walking, talking avatar, a 3-D representation of the human body.
Your doctor can "click" on a specific part of your avatar's body, such as the heart, and instantly see all of the available
related medical history, including text entries, lab results and MRIs.
Going even deeper, they can then access 3-D visualizations and audio clues of the heart—at a scale and resolution beyond anything
they can view today—to better understand your ailment. The computer will automatically compare those visual and audio clues to
thousands or hundreds of thousands of similar patient records, and be much more precise in diagnosing and treating you.
The explosion of medical information and emerging visualization technologies that were once the sole domain of supercomputing geeks
will transform how doctors diagnose and treat you right in their office.
In effect, doctors will gain superpowers: technologies to allow them to gain x-ray like vision to view medical images,
super-sensitive hearing to find tiniest audio clues in your heart beat, and ways to organize information in the same way they
treat a patient, by using the human body as a metaphor for a filing cabinet.