Preventing Epidemics with STEM 114
Anonymous Coward writes "IBM has released a Linux based technology enabling spatiotemporal modeling of infectious agents across the United States, providing scientists and public health officials with a powerful tool for understanding, and potentially preventing, the spread of infectious diseases. The new STEM technology provides Geographic Information System (GIS) data for every county in the United States supplied by TIGER files."
Intelligence an asset (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Intelligence an asset (Score:2)
It has some geographical data (US only), and uses this to plot or guess the spread of a disease, given the some parameters about the disease and the model.
It's the type of thing we constantly see in movies and TV shows about people researching diseases and disease control.
Re:Intelligence an asset (Score:1)
Spatio (Spatial) = Location
Temporal = Time
IBM has released a Linux based technology enabling the visualization of infectious agents across the United States at any point in time, providing scientists and public health officials with a powerful tool for understanding, and potentially preventing, the spread of infectious diseases.
Being able to model the data using different visualization/modelling techniques has the potential to allow officials to identify areas of interest. For more info look at ESRIs [esri.com]
Linux... (Score:4, Informative)
Note: this technology is based on Java2. It should run on any Java-supported platform, although IBM only lists Win2000 and Linux as supported platforms.
Re:Linux... (Score:2)
Re:Linux... (Score:2)
Linux:
1) unzip archive
2) export STEM_HOME=/location/of/stem
3) Obviously the batch file isn't gunna work, but if you've exported STEM_HOME, this should work fine "java -Xmx768M -Duser.dir=$STEM_HOME -jar $STEM_HOME\bin\stem.jar"
Just got it running in FC3, lickety split... and it already looks intimidating!
Re:Linux... (Score:2)
So I just ran the Flu1, and this is actually cool, despite being mostly over my head.
Does someone know where we can find the properties of other contagions so we can punch those in and see the visuals?
Re:Linux... (Score:2)
Re:Linux... (Score:2, Funny)
it is not only immune from viruses, it stops them too!
It's virii damnit! Not viruses.
Re: It is viruses, not virii (Score:2)
Re:Linux... (Score:1)
Re:Linux... (Score:1)
Any thoughts?
Re:Linux...MAC (Score:1)
"java -Xmx768M -Duser.dir=$STEM_HOME -jar $STEM_HOME\bin\stem.jar"
Awesome, but there are some roadblocks (Score:5, Interesting)
However there isn't a way to track some problematic pathogens. For many diseases, there is a political aspect that prevents authorities from excercising their ability to contain the germ. HIV is the most obvious example of a virus that is so inherently related to a specific set of behaviors that it ought to be a simple matter of monitoring infected persons and preventing the disease from spreading. Unfortunately, the bearers of the virus claim that their right to these behaviors trumps the public health and safety risk posed by the virus.
If there were an outbreak of Capt. Tripps, would the government have the political will to actually put all those infected under quarantine, dooming them and essentially stripping them of all human rights, in order to prevent the spread of the disease? They have shown in the past that they are not willing to contain infected groups. What is to say that they will be in the future?
Re:Awesome, but there are some roadblocks (Score:3, Informative)
As for diseases like AIDS, many like Thabo Mbeki refuse to acknowledge the link between AIDS and HIV. And President Mbeki is seen by many as the voice of Africa. His views on AIDS are more disturbing than those who put politics over safety.
Re:Governments in denial (Score:3, Interesting)
While there is undoubtedly a conservative social agenda in many Muslim nations, their affinity for the natural sciences would hopefully make it easier for moderate and liberal Muslims, and Muslims as a people, to take on AIDS as a problem, from the perspective of science.
Nor
Re:I'm sick of it (Score:2)
The number of Muslims who do all the things you mentioned are a small minority compared to the rest. But like the minority in the US who clamor for FCC protection, moral judges and Arab-hate, they are the most vocal. Yet, there are people who have "bleeding heart praise"
Re:Awesome, but there are some roadblocks (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, when I unpacked it, I noticed all the data was just xml. If you can compile the source data for other countries, the program should work with that.
Re:Awesome, but there are some roadblocks (Score:2)
The problem then would be getting the relevant up-to-date data from the countries which would need this product, more than anything else.
But it's good to know that IBM is keeping with its pledge to keep things open, especially for such a valuable product.
Re:Awesome, but there are some roadblocks (Score:1)
Ian
Re:Awesome, but there are some roadblocks (Score:1)
I mean, modelling disease involves differential equations. You have to be crazy to use Java. C is much more trustworthy in that respect.
In fact, this knowledge should be widespread.
It's sad to see so many people take for granted that
Re:Awesome, but there are some roadblocks (Score:2)
And why would you think that C is trustworthy? It uses the underlieing FPU, which means that you can end up with all sorts of definitions of a float. Yes there is a floating library IFF there is no FPU. Well this is 200x, not 198x. The only systems without FPU's is embedded, and few of them are doing computational type programs.
Of course, with that said, I am a C/C++/Perl hacker. But there are advantages to Java such as consistency
Re:Awesome, but there are some roadblocks (Score:1)
Have you read the follow ups? Probably not.
Consistency in Java's VM? You've got to be kidding. Some do tail-recursions, some don't.
Java is not so well-designed. It's a fact. If it were not so, why
Re:Awesome, but there are some roadblocks (Score:1)
That paper is from 1998. Got any follow-ups?
Flawed US-only disease model, Linux availability (Score:1)
Yes, this was my first thought too.
Even if a disease starts in the US, it seems to me that people from the area where an outbreak starts will be travelling abroad long before the infection is detected.So, while it is cured in one place, it may develop and spread in parallel elsewhere.
So then, the problem is that worldwide flights and other forms of human travel must be taken into account, not to mention trade of food, materials, animals, etc.
This software is probably a great help, and I welcome it.
I
Re:Awesome, but there are some roadblocks (Score:1)
Like having sex? (Score:1)
Re:Like having sex? (Score:2)
The Reagan/AIDS Lie? (Score:2)
"Reagan had an excellent record on gay rights issues--to the extent that anyone at that level of office in that day and age could be said to have such a record, anyway, since he had publicly supported gay rights measures and, while he did ally with some conservative Christian forces, never once backed any anti-gay legislation and was always personally gay-friendly. While it's t
Re:The Reagan/AIDS Lie? (Score:2)
But the history here is a book written by a San Francisco gay who died of Aids? Are you saying his indictment of federal, state, and local government, and gay rights activists, are inaccurate? I don't think the omission of important CDC work invalidates these other criticisms.
I am sorry but I have only seen the movie and just now learned of the book.
Ways to get HIV (Score:1)
Umm, there are many ways to get HIV: irresponsible orgies, making love to your committed gay partner of the last nineteen years, being born with it, providing emergency medical aid without proper precautions, or even having it cross a species divide from your pet monkey. The incubation period is long, so you may not recognise the people who are carriers.
Now, sure... you could lock up all those people who you consider a threat. But then... what about smokers? Aren't they a threat to themselves, and peop
Re:Awesome, but there are some roadblocks (Score:1)
Well of course removing infected people from the population would do that. But in a larger, less controlled populous the actual result would be nobody seeking treatment at all, as it effectively ends their active life to do so.
Interesting Project (Score:2, Insightful)
Ian
Re:Interesting Project (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Interesting Project (Score:2)
If you're using firefox, go get the bugmenot plugin. Worked fine for me. Just right click > bugmenot > bang, you're ready to go.
Re:Mod the parent down (Score:1)
If it's out in the internet, do you really believe that this kind of registration is going to stop a real "terrorist"?
Terrorist: I am going to download this nifty tool an wreak havok on america. mwahahahaha!
IBM: Sorry you have to register first and since your IP is not in the USA we have to review your application
Terrorist: Ah bummer, I guess the USA is triumphant again
Terrorism is the new comunism
Re:Mod the parent down (Score:1)
That program released by IBM is a scientific tool. Everything you can think of can be used for good or evil by a sufficiently determined individual, especially in science. The day you allow your government or your military intelligence to dictate what is good science and what is bad science, the terrorist have already won. Never allow your fears, to take away your liberties. It seems
Re:Mod the parent down (Score:2)
Re:Mod the parent down (Score:2)
Get your head out of the holywood hero-machine, and pay attention to the real world, and you may just manage to survive your rotation.
Not exactly free download (Score:2)
And if you're not in the U.S., don't expect to get a chance to. Though the site at first glance seems to allow you to download it, it first requires you to create an IBM user account, which requires that you provide a fair amount of information about you and your company (guess they can't imagine, nor care, that private individuals might perchance be interested in it).
Once you've done that, and you actually go to the download page for the product, it requires
Re:Not exactly free download (Score:1)
I've now had a chance to play with it and it looks nice. Just how useful it is remains to be seen until I can find some time to try to put one of my models into it.
Ian
Modelling != understanding (Score:3, Insightful)
While the models (assumptions) hold true, they can provide some nice "what if" input, but they can never replace field data.
Re:Modelling != understanding (Score:1)
Re:Modelling != understanding (Score:1)
Always modelling (Score:1)
Brief Tiger Explanation (Score:5, Interesting)
An even Briefer Tiger Explanation (Score:2)
Xix.
Zombie Infection (Score:2, Funny)
Not STEM! (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Oh No! (Score:1)
other uses (Score:3, Insightful)
Basically any thing that spreads over time can be modeled and viewed this way. Kinda neat.
Moving right along (Score:1)
It could be an IBM-AlQaeda alliance or not, by this time...
Stem Cells (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Stem Cells (Score:1)
(I'm going to the 6th level of hell, the city of dis, according to Dante, btw)
Wow! (Score:1)
Re:Wow! (Score:1)
With that said, any sort of open human epidemic might be hard to model, given that there's a possibility of on-purpose spreading. That data might be pretty hard to input, just way too many variables.
We'll probably get to see this though, bird flu in particular could easily take off this summer and spread even wider around the planet, now that they have found out some humans can be carriers and not sho
Re:Wow! (Score:1)
I was doing work with soybean in Nebraska a couple years ago. We were working on fungicide application techniques for the anticipated Soybean Rust event.
I have the advantage with plants that they don't move like humans. Well, row crops don't at least, hort crops get shipped all over. That's how Phytophthora ramorum was spread recently.
well, (Score:1)
hey, jeeps! way cool! We have an 80 cj7 here now (needs a carb that works, need it *badly*, currently have a carter bbd which sucks rubber donkey...whatevers, can't get it right no matter how many times I rebuild it, tweak it, curse at it, love on it, it just won't cooperate) and I've had a 59 window wagon
Re:Wow! (Score:1)
Tiger Files? Ugh. (Score:2)
Re:Tiger Files? Ugh. (Score:1)
TIGER and Weather are great examples... (Score:2)
of why IP laws should be returned to what our founders originally concieved.
The TIGER files is produced by the gov. on our dollars and has help numerous projects. In addition, it has helped launch numerous companies that used these files for data.
Likewise, the Weather data from the gov. has helped citizens all over the world, and created numerous companies including accuweather.
Autism provides a good test for this technology (Score:2)
I've done some modeling of the autism epidemic at the state level and found that the most promising explanation is some interaction between recent immigrants from India and people of Finnish ancestry.
When you look at the scatter plot [laboratory...states.com] it is quite graphic with a correlation of 60% at 49 degrees of freedom for a very high statistical significance (p Indeed, you can take hundreds of biologically relevant variables, includin
Re:So the people of India are to blame? (Score:2)
The method is so basic that I'm confident that anyone who set out to do a by-state demographic analysis would come up with the same or very similar results.
This isn't playing with numbers. It is quite basic statistical analysis -- so basic in fact that there really isn't any excuse for it not to have been replicated many times over already by people funded to research autism.