Alberta pilot will see 10 doctors’ offices administer COVID-19 vaccines Ramazi said there are some advantages to using machine learning for COVID-19.“If you use the right algorithms and if you modify them in the right way so you can use them properly, you have the freedom of not worrying much about how these will be really influencing each other.
You let the algorithm find how they are related and do the job for you,” he said.“Use all the existing data that we have – what’s the temperature today, what’s the preventive policies, what’s the level of mobility and so on – now tell me what happens in the future 10 weeks.”The models have a 10 per cent rate of error currently, but Ramazi said that it’s still a prototype being fine-tuned..