Denmark: Siltanews – News Desk
3D reconstruction of hospital rooms could help nurses identify risks and reduce paperwork.
Denmark-based Teton, a company that offers an AI companion to help nurses monitor patients and optimize workflow, announced it created a real-time, live 3D reconstruction of a hospital room using Gefion, Denmark’s national supercomputer.
The aim is to help nurses recognize risks early, reduce paperwork and improve patient care.
Operated by the Danish Center for AI Innovation, Gefion is built on NVIDIA DGX systems. Teton uses NVIDIA DGX systems “to generate data for the digital twin.”
According to NVIDIA, DGX Station is a “high-performance NVIDIA Grace Blackwell desktop supercomputer powered by the NVIDIA Blackwell Ultra platform.” It enables AI developers, researchers, data scientists and students to prototype, fine-tune and inference large models on desktops.
In addition, users can run the models locally or deploy them on NVIDIA DGX Cloud, any other accelerated cloud or another data center infrastructure.
The digital twin provides a real-time view of what is happening inside a care facility in 3D.
In a statement, the company explained that the Teton AI Gym is a simulation engine that makes true-to-life, 3D care environments of realistic patient and staff interactions utilizing synthetic data.
The company said that early pilots have shown that it can reduce night shift work by as much as 25%. Our system can understand what people are doing, how they are sleeping, their respiration rate, their lying position and their gait.