TOKYO -- Japan's education ministry plans to develop a generative artificial intelligence program that produces medical and scientific hypotheses by learning from research papers and images of experiments, Nikkei has learned.
Homegrown tool will be used for medicine and material development

The Riken institute uses AI and robots for cell cultivation research for regenerative medicine. (Photo by Kosaku Mimura)
TOKYO -- Japan's education ministry plans to develop a generative artificial intelligence program that produces medical and scientific hypotheses by learning from research papers and images of experiments, Nikkei has learned.