Karolinska Institutet's new Centre for AI Innovation isn't building hype — it's building the infrastructure to turn promising medical AI into tools that actually reach patients. I live close enough to the Karolinska campus in Solna that I pass its cluster of research towers regularly on my way across town. From the outside, it looks like exactly what it is — serious, slightly austere, built for people who spend their careers peering into things most of us never see. It doesn't look, at least not from the road, like a startup launchpad. But when I read what's happening inside, it struck me as something worth paying attention to, precisely because it is so deliberately unglamorous. The news. On May 29, Karolinska Institutet published a detailed account of what its newly active Centre for AI Innovation — CAII — is actually doing, having moved from its April 22 inauguration ceremony into operational work. The centre is directed by Johanna Furuhjelm and built ...