 Hi, I'm Elizabeth Kropinski, Professor and Vice Chair of Research at Emory University. My background is I'm an experimental psychologist. I've been in radiology and imaging sciences since 1987 in a whole variety of capacities. The course this year that we're teaching is from analytic to clinical implementation, moving AI and deep learning into the clinic. There's four of us instructors, and it progresses all the way from just some basics about artificial intelligence and deep learning, the techniques, and what's important from the perspective, not necessarily the building of the techniques, but once you've kind of built them, how do you then take these technologies, software, hardware, algorithms and so on, and how do you take them from that phase into something that's actually going to be evaluated clinically with the users in mind? There's enough of everything from sort of basic level all the way through advanced level throughout the day and what we're teaching that really is going to be a benefit to just about anybody. Even if you think you're an expert in the field, like I said, we attack this from four different perspectives, so you're probably not going to be an expert in all four. I think the coolest thing is the methods. We're going to teach you about a lot of the different techniques that can be used to study how do you get your AI and deep learning schemes into clinical use. You can read articles, you can go to conferences and listen to the scientific talks, but what you're missing, if you don't take courses, for example, the ones here that are offered at SPIE, is you miss out on the opportunity to really learn directly in a fairly concise amount of time what's the state of the art in the field. The course instructors really are world's experts and they have the ability to get you a lot of information in a short amount of time and you really do benefit. You get to take home the course notes and everything and it's the interaction I think with the other students as well as the instructors that really is of a huge benefit, again, no matter what stage of your career you're in.