
BURLINGAME, CA - What impact will artificial intelligence (AI) have on radiology? Dr. Curtis Langlotz, PhD, of Stanford University sees AI as just the latest in a series of technological revolutions that have reshaped medical imaging over the decades. He discussed this idea in a video interview at the RSNA Spotlight Course: Radiology in the Age of AI.
While many radiologists fear that AI could take their jobs, Langlotz is less pessimistic. Radiologists may need to change and learn new AI-related skills, but AI is just the next wave in a series of developments that have included CT, MRI, ultrasound, and other technologies that radiologists have come to master and incorporate into their clinical practice.
"Some of the things that we do that we find tedious, which might be measuring lesions, tracking lesions over time, those are the kinds of tasks that AI is going to be very good at, so in some ways it will change our jobs for the better," he said. "We will be doing the things that are cognitively more interesting and challenging for us."
Dr. Curtis Langlotz, PhD, of Stanford University.



![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=100&q=70&w=100)







![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)







