Lincoln Stein, Ontario Institute for Cancer Research
This keynote will be presented live.
AbstractDuring the week of March 16, 2020, the Ontario universities of Waterloo, Toronto, and McMaster closed their campuses due to the COVID-19 outbreak. Just a few days later, a small group of students who suddenly found themselves with lots of free time mounted a web site called
flatten.ca to collect self-reported symptoms from individuals with COVID-19 and to display the distribution of cases across the country. On the first day it opened,
flatten.ca had about 300 visitors. Within two weeks this number had swelled to 337,000 and continues to grow. The system is now used by public health authorities across the country, has been adopted by the City of Montreal as its official COVID-19 tracking system, and has spawned similar sites in locales as far away as Somalia. The students did not need to write a research grant proposal, apply to a health data registry for access, seek REB approval, or obtain software licenses. They perceived an urgent need, applied open source tools and methodologies, and built a fully functional system in record time, well ahead of the "professionals" in academia and industry.
This is the world that the pioneers of Open Source envisioned. One in which a passionate community of individuals can turn an idea into reality with a few keystrokes by building on top of a large set of unencumbered high quality tools, techniques and datasets.
However, it doesn't always go this way. In biomedical research we continue to be encumbered by antiquated protocols for accessing health data, stymied by published descriptions of computational protocols that are faulty or incomplete, impeded by the logistics of moving large data sets around, and blindered by restrictive data usage conditions that discourage the creative integration of diverse datasets. In this talk, I will look back over the progress we have made, and then look forward to the new paradigms for code and data sharing that promise to make success stories like
flatten.ca the rule rather than the exception.
This keynote will be introduced by
Nomi Harris.