Looking for best practices for deploying an in-office MRI? Tune in to this subspecialty radiology Webinar, which includes information about what to expect from your MRI interpretations, and what to look for from your radiology interpretation provider. You can also learn about the advantages of having your own MRI, as well as modality protocol recommendations. Hear our expert panel of physicians discuss commonly missed pathologies in musculoskeletal MRI cases and challenges with imaging shoulders. Their in-depth discussion will also focus on the benefits, challenges, and best practices of deploying in-office MRI equipment. This Webinar is sponsored by Franklin & Seidelmann Subspecialty Radiology in conjuction with Orthopedic Technology Review, and will include a PowerPoint presentation with audio and a live Q&A session with the speakers.
MSK MRI: Making the Most of Subspecialty Radiology Interpretations
Oct 3rd, 2006
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![A normal mammogram confirmed by three-year radiologic follow-up illustrates reader-marked regions of interest (ROIs) during (A) unaided (round 1) and (B) artificial intelligence (AI)–assisted (round 2) reading. Each colored dot represents an ROI for recall by a human reader. Readers could mark more than one ROI per case, represented by multiple dots of the same color. During AI-assisted reading, the AI system displayed three visible prompts: two with suspicion of malignancy scores of 35% (left mediolateral oblique [L MLO] and craniocaudal [L CC]) and one with a suspicion of malignancy score of 10% (right craniocaudal [R CC]), shown as polygonal overlays. Without AI, six of 10 readers (60%) marked a false-positive ROI. With AI assistance, this fell to two of 10 (20%). R MLO = right mediolateral oblique.](https://img.auntminnie.com/mindful/smg/workspaces/default/uploads/2026/07/2026-07-14-radiology-mammogram-ai-auto-bias.H0bYO8QlWs.jpg?auto=format%2Ccompress&fit=crop&h=112&q=70&w=112)




