The role of the radiologic technologist has evolved way beyond taking a cross table lateral of spine at C7-T1. Using digital modalities and the electronic medical record helps ED physicians deal efficiently with trauma management and provide the urgent care that their patients need to survive. This course will cover all modalities and advanced imaging technology used in the emergency room. You will explore the use of digital imaging, CT, and ultrasound, and the roles they each play in the hands of professionals such as yourselves in the critical environment of the emergency room where matters of life and death are dealt with every day.
Technology and Advanced Imaging in the ED
Jun 11th, 2010
Gaithersburg, MD
US
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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)




