Artificial Intelligence (AI) is no longer futuristic; it is part of how we live today. We rely on voice assistants to remind us of birthdays, apps to keep our medical records organised, and digital tools to suggest when it might be time for a check-up. These small conveniences make life easier, but they also raise a deeper concern. Dr Anirudh R. Deshmukh, neurologist at Kailash Hospital, Noida, Uttar Pradesh, explains if machines are starting to think and remember on our behalf.

A different intelligence

To understand the impact of AI on memory, it helps to first see how different its “memory” is from ours. AI stores information in codes and algorithms. Its memory works like a massive library of data that can be pulled out in seconds. For example, a medical AI platform can instantly scan

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