Hi
@SpacePenguin -- Thanks for the informative post. Also want to mentioned that I'm appreciating your comments about how you're using ChatGPT.
Thanks, Wayne! I was surprised that I hadn't seen anyone doing this with their gut microbiome tests, which is why I posted about it. I like to treat ChatGPT as a slightly goofy collaborator - goofy because it sometimes makes dumb mistakes (especially when doing maths) and has an odd upbeat tone. So I have long conversations: asking it what it by this and that, how sure it, what is it's evidence, how it can reconcile things it has said that seem to conflict, even ask it how I should use it and what I should ask.
It's such a valuable resource for us, and yet I think too many are reluctant to use it. Maybe because of unfamiliarity, or perhaps a bit intimidated by learning a new skill.
Some of the expressions of caution I have heard from people are overblown in my view. There have been at least three doctors that have given me terrible advice that has damaged me (perhaps even seriously and long-term). GenAI can be a great supplement to care from a human doctor - it has access to vastly data and informational analysis than a human, but the human has perception, judgment, and personal interaction.
I will say, learning how to best use it does seem to be a skill that doesn't just happen overnight. But the more we learn about its capabilities, its strengths, its weaknesses, the more we can take advantage of it. Not only for health research, but to make our everyday lives much more manageable and easier.
Absolutely! Like all tools, it requires skill. You can use it well or poorly. And you can always improve the way you use it (especially in terms of writing prompts).