A radically new way to think about technology use and reuse that promotes resilience and privacy
This article talks about what I believe is the single most important question for data science to tackle in the next ten years.
This piece originally written for The Conversation talks about the opportunities for using data science to help our society become more resilient to climate change
What if we could bring all the knowledge, data, insight, and prior decision-making of drug discovery together and use it to accelerate the discovery of new drugs? What if we could encode the millions of known relationships between potential new (or old) drugs, protein targets, genomics, biological processes, and disease mechanisms, and then use all this together to get new insights into disease and treatments?
A new report from FEMA shows efforts to encourage preparedness have failed, yet they are needed now more than ever. How can data science help?
There are now a plethora of apps and services that mean that if you do have internet service, you can to an amazing degree replicate the functions of an Emergency Operations Center (EOC) on the smartphone in your pocket. In this article we will describe a set of apps that will enable you to achieve the primary functions of the EOC: meeting & sharing space, phone and radio communications, situational awareness, and access to plans, documents and maps.
This is a five-minute flash talk on transforming pharmaceutical and healthcare companies into data companies.
Introducing Cheminformatics: an intensive self-study guide is a complete self-study guide designed to give you a rapid introduction to the emerging field of cheminformatics,
This is a talk given at the Pervasive Technology Institute at Indiana University on Big Data in Drug Discovery
Jaron Lanier’s Who Owns The Future is a must-read for anyone working with technology or data in the 21st century (i.e. all of us).