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Carnegie Mellon University and Cleveland Clinic Develop AI System to Interpret Cardiac MRI Scans with Enhanced Accuracy

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Carnegie Mellon University and Cleveland Clinic Develop AI System to Interpret Cardiac MRI Scans with Enhanced Accuracy
Business

Business

Carnegie Mellon University and Cleveland Clinic Develop AI System to Interpret Cardiac MRI Scans with Enhanced Accuracy

2026-05-21 20:05 Last Updated At:20:30

PITTSBURGH & CLEVELAND--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 21, 2026--

A team of researchers from Carnegie Mellon University, in collaboration with Cleveland Clinic ’s Cardiovascular Innovation Research Center, has developed an artificial intelligence (AI) system capable of interpreting some of the most complex heart scans in medicine, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), without the need for manually labeled training data.

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The novel system, called CMR-CLIP, is designed to interpret cardiac MRI scans by connecting moving images of the heart with corresponding clinical radiology reports. In testing, it significantly outperformed general-purpose AI models, in some cases by more than 35%. The system also showed strong potential for improving cardiac imaging analysis, case retrieval and clinical decision support.

“This work demonstrates that domain-specific foundation models can significantly outperform general-purpose AI systems in specialized clinical applications,” said Ding Zhao, associate professor in Carnegie Mellon University’s Department of Mechanical Engineering and co-principal investigator on the study. “By designing models that reflect the structure and complexity of cardiac MRI data, rather than adapting generic image models, we can unlock new levels of performance and clinical utility.”

David Chen, Ph.D., of Cleveland Clinic, a co-principal investigator on the project, emphasized the clinical implications of the work. “Cardiac MRI interpretation is highly specialized and time intensive. Systems like CMR-CLIP have the potential to support clinicians through automated screening, and interpretation support, particularly in settings where expert readers are limited. Such reader assistant tools are critical to improving patient access to this powerful diagnostic technology.”

Cardiac MRI is widely regarded as the gold standard for evaluating heart structure, function and tissue health. A single scan can provide a comprehensive view of the heart, including pumping performance, muscle damage, blood flow and structural abnormalities. However, each study can contain hundreds to thousands of images across multiple views and time points. Even for trained specialists, interpreting a single exam can take 40 minutes or more. Because the technology is expensive and concentrated in major medical centers, there is a limited supply of experts available to meet growing clinical demand.

This combination of complexity and limited data has also made cardiac MRI one of the most challenging domains for AI. Most machine learning systems rely on large, carefully labeled datasets, but in cardiac imaging, expert annotations are scarce, time-consuming to produce and costly to scale.

To overcome this barrier, the research team leveraged a resource already embedded in routine clinical workflows: radiology reports. Every cardiac MRI exam is paired with a written summary in which clinicians document key findings in an “impression” section. Instead of relying on manual labels, the team trained CMR-CLIP to align MRI image sequences with these natural language clinical summaries, enabling the model to learn directly from how physicians describe and interpret scans in practice.

Rather than treating cardiac MRI as a collection of static images, CMR-CLIP represents each study as a video of the beating heart. The model processes multiple standard views of the heart alongside time-resolved sequences that capture motion and tissue behavior. This lets the model capture both structure and movement, much like a cardiologist does when reviewing a scan.

Trained on more than 13,000 de-identified real patient studies from Cleveland Clinic, the system learned from over a million images and hundreds of thousands of motion sequences collected over more than a decade. When tested, CMR-CLIP was able to identify cardiac conditions in a “zero-shot” setting, meaning it had never been directly trained on those specific labels, simply by matching images to descriptive prompts like “enlarged left ventricle.”

Even more striking, with just a single example of a condition, CMR-CLIP could often match the performance of other systems that required dozens of labeled cases. In more specialized diagnostic tasks, the model reached near-clinical levels of performance, including accuracy rates as high as 99% for certain heart conditions. It also demonstrated the ability to search through large databases of scans using natural language, retrieving similar cases in a way that could one day help clinicians quickly compare patients with rare or complex presentations.

A key test of whether the system was truly learning meaningful representations came when it was evaluated outside the institution where it was trained. The model still performed strongly on two entirely separate datasets (one collected in France, one in Cleveland Clinic Florida), suggesting it could generalize beyond a single hospital system.

“This work highlights a new direction for medical AI by showing how large-scale clinical data can be used to train models without requiring time-consuming manual labeling,” said Deborah Kwon, M.D., Director of Cardiac MRI at Cleveland Clinic, clinical lead and co-author of this study. “This technology has the potential to not only improve efficiency but also quality of reporting to support more consistent and clinically meaningful interpretations, as well as serve as an important teaching tool in a highly specialized and complex imaging field.”

Looking ahead, the research team plans to extend the model to additional cardiac imaging sequences, including perfusion imaging, T2-weighted imaging and parametric mapping, as well as explore applications in automated report generation and interactive clinical decision support systems in resource limited applications. This research was published in Nature Communications. The CMR-CLIP codebase is publicly available at: github.com/Makiya11/CMRCLIP.

About the College of Engineering: The College of Engineering at Carnegie Mellon University is a top-ranked engineering college that is known for our intentional focus on cross-disciplinary collaboration in research. The College is well-known for working on problems of both scientific and practical importance. Our “maker” culture is ingrained in all that we do, leading to novel approaches and transformative results. Our acclaimed faculty have a focus on innovation management and engineering to yield transformative results that will drive the intellectual and economic vitality of our community, nation, and world.

About Cleveland Clinic

Cleveland Clinic is a nonprofit multispecialty academic medical center that integrates clinical and hospital care with research and education. Founded in 1921 by four renowned physicians with a vision of providing outstanding patient care based upon the principles of cooperation, compassion and innovation, Cleveland Clinic has pioneered many medical breakthroughs, including coronary artery bypass surgery and the first face transplant in the United States. Cleveland Clinic is consistently recognized in the U.S. and throughout the world for its expertise and care. Among Cleveland Clinic’s 83,000 employees worldwide are more than 6,600 salaried physicians and researchers, and 21,900 registered nurses and advanced practice providers, representing 140 medical specialties and subspecialties. Cleveland Clinic is a 6,725-bed health system that includes a 173-acre main campus near downtown Cleveland, 23 hospitals, 300 outpatient facilities, including locations in northeast Ohio; Florida; Las Vegas, Nevada; Toronto, Canada; Abu Dhabi, UAE; and London, England. In 2025, there were 15.9 million outpatient encounters, 343,000 hospital admissions and observations, and 336,000 surgeries and procedures throughout Cleveland Clinic’s health system. Visit us at clevelandclinic.org. Follow us at x.com/CleClinicNews. News and resources are available at newsroom.clevelandclinic.org.

Editor’s Note:Cleveland Clinic News Service is available to provide broadcast-quality interviews and B-roll upon request.

A team of researchers from Carnegie Mellon University, in collaboration with Cleveland Clinic’s Cardiovascular Innovation Research Center, has developed an artificial intelligence (AI) system capable of interpreting some of the most complex heart scans in medicine, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), without the need for manually labeled training data.

A team of researchers from Carnegie Mellon University, in collaboration with Cleveland Clinic’s Cardiovascular Innovation Research Center, has developed an artificial intelligence (AI) system capable of interpreting some of the most complex heart scans in medicine, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), without the need for manually labeled training data.

PARIS (AP) — The French Open begins in Paris on Sunday. This guide tells you what you need to know about how to watch the second tennis Grand Slam of 2026 on TV, what the betting odds are, what the schedule is, who the reigning champions are and more:

Play begins Sunday at 11 a.m. local time (0900 GMT, 0500 EDT).

— In the U.S.: TNT, TruTV, HBO Max.

— Other countries are listed here.

Coco Gauff of the United States and Carlos Alcaraz of Spain.

Gauff won the trophy for the first time by defeating top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka 6-7 (5), 6-2, 6-4. Alcaraz rallied from two sets down and saved three match points to beat top-ranked Jannik Sinner 4-6, 6-7 (4), 6-4, 7-6 (3), 7-6 (10-2) for his fifth major title in as many finals. It was Alcaraz’s second straight French Open title. Alcaraz injured his right wrist this season and has withdrawn from the French Open and Wimbledon.

Sabalenka is the women's, and Sinner is the men's. They are ranked No. 1 and the tournament seedings follow the WTA and ATP rankings.

Four-time Roland Garros champion Iga Swiatek is listed by bookmakers as the money-line favorite in the women's singles. She is at +225 ahead of Sabalenka (+275). In the men's draw, in the absence of the injured Alcaraz, Sinner is the overwhelming favorite at -300, ahead of Alexander Zverev at +750.

— Sunday through Tuesday: First Round (Women and Men)

— Wednesday-Thursday: Second Round (Women and Men)

— May 29-30: Third Round (Women and Men)

— May 31-June 1: Fourth Round (Women and Men)

— June 2-3: Quarterfinals (Women and Men)

— June 4: Women’s Semifinals

— June 5: Men’s Semifinals

— June 6: Women’s Final

— June 7: Men’s Final

— Jannik Sinner enters the French Open on a 29-match win streak, chasing a career Grand Slam

— Coco Gauff has a new mindset for title defense and more confidence on her serve

— Sinner opens French Open against wild card

— Elina Svitolina and Marta Kostyuk raise trophies for war-torn Ukraine on the tennis court

— No. 1 Sabalenka calls for boycott if players don’t get bigger cut of Grand Slam revenues

— French Open players plan media protest over prize money share

— Carlos Alcaraz pulls out of Wimbledon because of wrist injury

— 45-year-old Venus Williams to play in French Open women’s doubles with Hailey Baptiste

— Three-star gastronomy is coming to Roland Garros. Organizers are launching The Jardin des Chefs, a new dining area showcasing the best of French cuisine. Some of France's top chefs and pastry chefs will take turns preparing their signature dishes, along with exclusive creations.

— Electronic devices that record players’ biometric data have been authorized on a trial basis for the first time. The initiative is designed to help players gain insights into their physical performance and recovery throughout the tournament, organizers said. Athletes will be allowed to use any device included on the “Player Analysis Technology” list approved by the International Tennis Federation. The trial will begin at Roland Garros and continue at the other Grand Slam tournaments this year.

Top players have expressed “their deep disappointment” at the French Open prize money. Open organizers announced an overall prize money increase by about 10% for an overall pot of 61.7 million euros ($72.1 million). The total amount is up 5.3 million euros from last year. But the players said their share of Roland Garros revenue has declined from 15.5% in 2024 to 14.9% projected in 2026. The Australian Open this year increased the players’ pay by 16%, and the U.S. Open last year went up by 20%.

Both, as you can read about in this AP story from 2019. English speakers tend to use “French Open,” although the French Tennis Federation doesn’t call it that. The French — and much of the rest of the world — go with “Roland Garros,” which is the facility that hosts the tournament and is named after a World War I fighter pilot.

The French Open is played outdoors on red clay courts at Roland-Garros on the southwest outskirts of Paris. Women play best-of-three-set matches with a first-to-10 tiebreaker at 6-all in the third; men play best of five with a tiebreaker at 6-all in the fifth. There are separate day and night sessions most days. The event lasts 15 days. There is a retractable roof on the main stadium, Court Philippe-Chatrier.

AP tennis: https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

Jannik Sinner, of Italy, wears shoes in the Italian flag colors after defeating Casper Ruud, of Norway, 6/4, 6/4 in the final match to win the Italian Open tennis tournament, in Rome, Sunday, May 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

Jannik Sinner, of Italy, wears shoes in the Italian flag colors after defeating Casper Ruud, of Norway, 6/4, 6/4 in the final match to win the Italian Open tennis tournament, in Rome, Sunday, May 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

United States' Coco Gauff reacts as she plays against Ukraine's Elina Svitolina during their women's final match at the Italian Open tennis tournament in Rome, Saturday, May 16, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

United States' Coco Gauff reacts as she plays against Ukraine's Elina Svitolina during their women's final match at the Italian Open tennis tournament in Rome, Saturday, May 16, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

Jannik Sinner, of Italy, reacts after defeating Casper Ruud, of Norway, 6/4, 6/4 in the final match at the Italian Open tennis tournament, in Rome, Sunday, May 17, 2026.(AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)

Jannik Sinner, of Italy, reacts after defeating Casper Ruud, of Norway, 6/4, 6/4 in the final match at the Italian Open tennis tournament, in Rome, Sunday, May 17, 2026.(AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)

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