Voice As a Vital Sign: Caitlyn Brooksby, Vice President of Marketing and Strategic Partnership at Canary Speech
Jun 27, 2024
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Caitlyn Brooksby from Canary Speech discusses using AI to analyze voice for health conditions like Huntington's, Alzheimer's. By focusing on vocal biomarkers, they aim for early and accurate detection. The technology screens for cognitive conditions within seconds of speech, showcasing its incredible potential in healthcare.
AI technology is being used to diagnose rare diseases by analyzing patients' voice and speech.
Canary Speech's vocal biomarker technology screens for cognitive and neurodegenerative conditions with high accuracy rates.
Deep dives
AI Technology for Rare Disease Diagnosis
AI technology is being explored to aid in the diagnosis of rare diseases by analyzing the voice and speech of patients. The National Institutes of Health and private sector are investing in research projects to test the effectiveness of this approach. Canary Speech focuses on advancing language technology for actionable measurements of patients, consumers, and clinicians.
Canary Speech's Vocal Biomarker Technology
Canary Speech aims to replace subjective measurements with objective ones through vocal biomarker technology in healthcare. Using AI and machine learning techniques, they screen for over eight different conditions by analyzing just seconds of conversational speech. The technology has been extended to screen for cognitive and neurodegenerative conditions like mild cognitive impairment, Alzheimer's, and Parkinson's disease.
Rare Disease Diagnosis with Vocal Biomarkers
Canary Speech collaborates with research partners like Harvard and Beth Israel to develop models for rare diseases such as Huntington's disease. By analyzing vocal biomarkers, they have successfully created models to identify diseases in a shorter timeframe. The technology screens for specific features within speech, leading to faster and more accurate diagnosis for rare diseases, impacting patients and caregivers positively.
We continue our Year of the Zebra focus on rare diseases today by exploring the ability of AI technology to aid in the diagnosis of rare and other conditions by analyzing the voice and speech of the patient. This approach is promising enough that the National Institutes of Health has invested in research projects to test its effectiveness, and the private sector is pursuing it as well, including the company Canary Speech whose technology can be trained to detect conditions that are traditionally difficult to identify, or those where early identification is crucial to treatment. “With just seconds of conversational speech, we can screen for multiple behavioral and cognitive conditions,” says Caitlyn Brooksby, Canary's vice president of Marketing and Strategic Partnership. One prime example she offers is a study on Huntington’s disease done in collaboration with Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in which more than a thousand features of speech were identified differentiating healthy patients from those with the disease. “Every ten seconds, we're looking at millions of data points, but we don't look at the words you say. We're looking at biomarkers within speech such as duration per word, word-per-second, bandwidth and contrast. It's really incredible what we can gather from speech alone,” she explains. Canary is in the second iteration of its Huntington’s model which is showing accuracy rates of 90% and above, and it recently added mild cognitive impairment, Alzheimer's, and Parkinson's disease to its offerings. Join host Lindsey Smith on this episode of Raise the Line to learn more about this promising approach to diagnosis.