2018 Data Science for Social Good Goes Global, Tackling Diabetes, Tenant Harassment, Unemployment, and More
Fellows in Chicago and Portugal adapt data science and AI approaches for projects with non-profits and international governments
In Chicago and Portugal this summer, the science behind self-driving cars, virtual assistants, and targeted advertising will be repurposed for nobler pursuits: safer workplaces and streets, improved vaccination and diabetes treatment, reduced incarceration and school dropouts, and much more.
The 2018 Data Science for Social Good (DSSG) summer fellowship is the first global edition of the University of Chicago program, with 38 fellows from around the world gathering concurrently in the United States and Portugal. Graduate and undergraduate students drawn from computer science, social sciences, and statistics will spend 12 weeks working with non-profit and government partners on innovative projects that harness data for improved services, as well as more efficient and effective interventions.
This year’s project come from federal agencies in El Salvador, Chile, Croatia, Portugal, and the Netherlands, local governments in New York City, Kansas, and Tuscany, a data innovation lab in Jakarta, and a network of community health centers in Chicago. The 20 female and 18 male fellows originate from 14 countries, including the US, India, Germany, Israel, Thailand, Hungary, Mexico, Paraguay, South Africa, and Spain.
“This is the most diverse year yet of Data Science for Social Good, from the mix of fellows and partners at our two simultaneous sites, to the range of problems that our project teams will address and the methods they will use,” said DSSG global director Rayid Ghani, a senior fellow at the UChicago Harris School of Public Policy. “We’re taking on new challenges, expanding and deepening the scope of previous work on criminal justice and education, and further demonstrating the potential of data science and artificial intelligence for social good and public policy.”
2018 DSSG Chicago projects aim to:
- Improve workplace safety by creating a data-driven approach to prioritizing inspections with Chile’s Dirección del Trabajo (Labor Agency).
- Support early diabetes screening at the AllianceChicago network of community health centers by identifying patients at risk of developing the disease.
- Use data from Johnson County, Kansas (a second-time DSSG partner) to prioritize mental health treatment and reduce people’s risk of going back to jail.
- Reduce traffic-related fatalities and injuries with Jakarta Smart City and Pulse Lab Jakarta by analyzing footage from the city’s traffic cameras and understanding risk factors at busy intersections.
- Identify factors that drive student dropout in El Salvador and help improve social programs that boost school enrollment with the country’s Ministry of Education.
- Predict which tenants are more likely to need legal assistance so that the New York City Mayor’s Public Engagement Unit can proactively provide more efficient and effective tenant assistance and resources.
In Portugal, DSSG Europe projects include predicting long-term unemployment in Portugal, improving response to traffic incidents on Dutch highways, promoting vaccination for measles, mumps, and rubella in Croatia, and improving sustainable tourist mobility in Tuscany, Italy.
DSSG Chicago is a collaboration between the Center for Data Science and Public Policy, the Mansueto Institute for Urban Innovation, the UChicago Department of Computer Science, and the Harris School of Public Policy at UChicago. The 2018 Chicago program is located at UChicago Polsky Exchange and directed by Elena Eneva. DSSG Europe takes place at the Nova School of Business and Economics and is directed by Leid Zejnilovic.