[music] [Prof. Tomasz Grodzicki, Ph.D.,] The Jagiellonian University was founded in one thousand three hundred sixty-four, so it was already oversix hundred and fifty years ago. The second motto: “inspired by the past, we shape the future”. And hence, we must combine these old values in teaching medicine, which have been present at the University for several hundred years, with the latest technological achievements carried by the twenty-first century. [music] [Dr. Klaudia Proniewska] Jagiellonian University Collegium Medicum has a laboratory of mixed reality in which we have HoloLens devices of Microsoft, thanks to which we can visualize anatomical structures in three dimensions. [music] [Radek Kolecki] When we look at ACT scan or MRI even an x-ray, it's flat, we only see it in one perspective, sometimes two others, but we can't really imagine it and that's not how our brain works. And a three-dimensional model takes that flatness and gives it context, and gives it life, and we're able to look at it and instead of spending minutes we could spend seconds. And that time that saved that effort we could apply towards better patient care. [Dr. Klaudia Proniewska] Thinking about the already advanced use of these technologies in clinical, I think it is a question of personalized medicine, where we can exactly, from the patient's source data prepare 3D models and use them in the preparatory process for surgical procedures, as well as sometime use them during surgery. Here we can emphasize the fact of cooperation with the Apocular company, where engineers support us in the process of creating these medical applications. [music] [Radek Kolecki] I see the future of the Microsoft HoloLens in a numberof avenues. Firstly in educating our future medical students. We're able to view such things as anatomy labs in a completely different way, and we're also able to connect with specialists potentially from across the globe. I also view it in terms of a physician using it with my patients, I want to be able to when they come to me pre-operatively to show them a model of their body and to explain it to them from the very beginning, and in terms of just patience they're able to experience their medical care in a completely new way. [Prof. Piotr Richter, Ph.D.] Today we have excellent quality, excellent possibilities, it is only important to use it effectively. It is the art of how to maintain harmony between medical technology and a certain humanistic approach to the patient and the human being.