Digital pathology is changing the ways in which pathologists work, driving a shift away from traditional diagnostic workflows that rely on glass slides and microscopes. However, change can be challenging in a field with over 100 years of history. Despite the benefits of digitization, most pathology practices have remained analog due to significant cost and technological barriers.

This could soon change as the past two decades have seen a significant increase in the image quality and resolution, enabled by whole slide imaging (WSI) scanners, and accompanying decreases in the costs of obtaining, storing, and managing digital slide data. Together with rapid progress in artificial intelligence (AI), these advances could unlock new applications, make diagnostic workflows more efficient, and ad

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