Analyze medical data to determine cause of death.
Detailed work activity
Analyze medical data to determine cause of death. is a detailed work activity in O*NET — a concrete unit of work shared across 2 occupations and seen in 3 occupation-specific tasks. It rolls up into the broader work activity Analyze health or medical data. in Analyzing Data or Information .
Detailed work activities are the most granular shared layer in O*NET's work-activity hierarchy (Generalized → Intermediate → Detailed → occupation-specific task). The figures below describe how this activity shows up across the economy and what independent studies measure about AI and this kind of work — not a prediction that the work will be automated.
AI exposure
Of the 3 tasks under this activity that the OpenAI / Eloundou “GPTs are GPTs” study rated, 1 (33%) are flagged as directly exposed to language models (E1) or exposed via model-powered tools (E2).
Exposure estimates overlap with model capabilities — whether a model could speed the task up — not whether the work will be done by software. Observed AI use is augmentation and assistance today, not jobs replaced.
Member tasks
Occupation-specific tasks O*NET maps to this detailed work activity, most important first.
- Review cases by analyzing autopsies, laboratory findings, or case investigation reports. · Physicians, Pathologists · importance 4.0 · exposure with tools
- Perform autopsies to determine causes of deaths. · Physicians, Pathologists · importance 3.4 · no direct exposure
- Conduct postmortem studies and analyses to determine the causes of animals' deaths. · Veterinarians · importance 3.2 · no direct exposure
Occupations that perform this
Sources for this page
Every figure above traces to a named public dataset and the exact release below — not hand-written opinion. See the full methodology for what each measure does and does not mean.
- O*NET 30.3 U.S. Department of Labor / National Center for O*NET Development
- “GPTs are GPTs” (Eloundou et al.) arXiv 2303.10130 OpenAI / academic
Data compiled June 2, 2026. Figures are estimates, not advice.
Cite this page
Singulariki. "Analyze medical data to determine cause of death.." Singulariki: a source-backed encyclopedia of work. Built from O*NET 30.3; “GPTs are GPTs” (Eloundou et al.) arXiv 2303.10130. Accessed June 7, 2026. https://singulariki.com/detailed-activities/analyze-medical-data-to-determine-cause-of-death
Singulariki. (2026). Analyze medical data to determine cause of death.. Singulariki: a source-backed encyclopedia of work. Retrieved June 7, 2026, from https://singulariki.com/detailed-activities/analyze-medical-data-to-determine-cause-of-death
@misc{singulariki-analyze-medical-data-to-determine-cause-of-death,
title = {Analyze medical data to determine cause of death.},
author = {{Singulariki}},
year = {2026},
note = {O*NET 30.3; “GPTs are GPTs” (Eloundou et al.) arXiv 2303.10130. Accessed June 7, 2026},
url = {https://singulariki.com/detailed-activities/analyze-medical-data-to-determine-cause-of-death}
} Citations name the underlying public dataset releases — they reflect what this page is built from, not just the URL.