Amer Abu-JassarEhab Zuhair Al-Jamal2024-07-242024-07-242024Amer Abu-Jassar Artificial intelligence ethics and healthcare / Amer Abu-Jassar, Ehab Zuhair Al-Jamal // Technical science research in Uzbekistan, 2024. – 2(1). – P. 108–115.2992-9148https://openarchive.nure.ua/handle/document/27514Artificial intelligence (AI), known by some as the industrial revolution (IR) 4.0, is going to change not only the way we do things, how we relate to others, but also what we know about ourselves. The IR1.0, the IR of the 18th century, impelled a huge social change without directly complicating human relationships. Mdern AI, however, has a tremendous impact on how we do things and also the ways we relate to one another. Facing this challenge, new principles of AI bioethics must beconsidered and developed to provide guidelines for the AI technology to observe so that the world will be benefited by the progress of this new intelligence, in particular for healthcare.enArtificial IntelligenceHealthcareArtificial intelligence ethics and healthcareArticle