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Jieneng Chen
Ari Sen · 2026-06-16 · via Scientific American

June 16, 2026

Creating artificial-intelligence tools for cancer detection

Stylized illustration portrait of Jieneng Chen by Jessine Hein.

Jessine Hein

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Computer scientist Jieneng Chen wants to digitize the physical world. He is the inventor of TransUNet, an artificial-intelligence tool that helps to map the boundaries of cancerous tumors while accounting for their relation to surrounding organ systems. TransUNet blends two popular computing architectures. The first is a convolutional neural network, which is traditionally used for understanding images. The second is a transformer—the “T” in GPT and the innovation responsible for much of the recent progress in large language models. Combining the two makes the tool useful to radiologists, enabling them to identify boundaries more accurately in CT scans or magnetic resonance imaging.

As a young boy, Chen would often disassemble toy cars in the miniature lab he had set up in his house in Quanzhou, China. His interest in the inner workings of machines ultimately led him to study mechanical engineering and then computer science in Shanghai. In his junior year of college he flew 7,400 miles to Johns Hopkins University to work on AI for early detection of cancer. There Chen developed models that could identify millimeter-scale tumors, which he says would be almost impossible for humans to discern visually from medical scans. “If we want to help the patients or help as many families as possible, we need to develop the AI tools that can detect cancers in early stages,” he says.


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A portrait of Jieneng Chen by Jeffery DelViscio.

Jeffery DelViscio

After returning to China, he started his doctorate at Johns Hopkins remotely amid the coronavirus pandemic. Because of the time difference, he’d stay up until midnight a few days each week to take his classes online. During this period he developed TransUNet, which has become the basis of detection systems for lung, pancreatic, liver and breast abnormalities. He built on that work after returning to Baltimore to finish his studies in person. “Great science is not always putting in many years on one project,” Chen says. “Instead it’s, you know, it’s kind of a spark, right?”

This article is part of The Young American Scientists, an editorially independent project that was produced with financial support from Regeneron.

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