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Projekt | Eventful

Laufzeit:

Zeit- und ortabhängige Modelle für das individuelle und gesellschaftliche Wohlbefinden

This project focusses on the interconnected problems of measuring and predicting health and well-being. Health and well-being exist at two levels: within the individual, where we may observe or measure a patient’s genetics, medical history and life course; and at the societal level, where the effect of the physical and socio-political environment might be apparent. Many public health epidemiologists hold that societal welfare and individual well-being are intrinsically linked. It may follow, therefore, that learning the dynamics of socio-political events can aid understanding of individual well-being, and vice versa.

We consider the world of events from two perspectives. ‘Events as output’ encompasses time-toevent analysis, where the task is to estimate the risk of an (adverse) event or the time until it occurs. ‘Events as input’ encompasses intensive longitudinal data analysis or the analysis of irregularlyspaced time series. In both areas, a key challenge is extracting useful features from high-dimensional, complex or dependent data structures to predict an outcome, be it dynamic or static. Existing machine learning tools and methods may need to be extended and adapted to handle such tasks.

The project explores methods of selecting and extracting features from whole genome data for survival problems (individual health), the effect of different levels of data aggregation on spatiotemporal models (societal health) and the challenges behind building a transparent, explainable and useful data science pipeline for such complex temporal data. A particular focus is paid to automation of the data cleaning process, as well as to effective combination of scientific and machine learning knowledge on problems where data are messy, sparse or only available in aggregate form.

Utility of the developed models and pipelines will be demonstrated through the collation of appropriate benchmarks and open data sets and application to several real-world problems, ultimately culminating in implementation as tools designed for the use of stakeholders and policymakers.

Publikationen

Alle Publikationen
  1. Effective refractive error coverage in adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis of updated estimates from population-based surveys in 76 countries modelling the path towards the 2030 global target

    Rupert Richard Alexander Bourne; Maria Vittoria Cicinelli; David Antony Selby; Tabassom Sedighi; Ian H Tapply; Ian McCormick; Jost B Jonas; Mohammad H Abdianwall; Mukharram M Bikbov; Tasanee Braithwaite; Matthew J Burton; Vera Carneiro; Robert J Casson; Ching-Yu Cheng; Nathan G Congdon; Catherine Creuzot-Garcher; Leon B Ellwein; Mohammad Hassan Emamian; Akbar Fotouhi; Timothy R Fricke; David S Friedman; João M Furtado; Ronnie George; Noopur Gupta; Xiaotong Han; Hassan Hashemi; Mingguang He; Abba Hydara; Aiko Iwase; Gyulli Kazakbaeva; Rajiv B Khandekar; Rohit C Khanna; Fatima Kyari; Luisa C Luque; Srinivas Marmamula; Andreas Müller; Vinay Nangia; Kovin S Naidoo; Jacqueline Ramke; Paisan Ruamviboonsuk; Solange R Salomão; Hugh R Taylor; Yih C Tham; Fotis Topouzis; Rohit Varma; Lingam Vijaya; Ningli Wang; Ya Xing Wang; Tien Y Wong; Hua Yan; Seth R Flaxman; Stuart Keel; Serge Resnikoff; Wondu Alemayehu; Aries Arditi; Alessandro Arrigo; Mukharram M Bikbov; Rupert R A Bourne; Tasanee Braithwaite; Alain M Bron; Matthew Burton; Robert J Casson; Ching-Yu Cheng; Maria Vittoria Cicinelli; Nathan G Congdon; Reza Dana; Monte A Del Monte; jenny P deva; Mo Dirani; Laura Dreer; Joshua R Ehrlich; Leon B Ellwein; Arthur G Fernandes; Seth Flaxman; Tim R Fricke; David S Friedman; João M Furtado; Gus Gazzard; Ronnie George; Billy R Hammond; Mary Elizabeth Hartnett; April D Ingram; Jost B Jonas; Songhomitra Panda-Jonas; Rim Kahloun; John H Kempen; Moncef Khairallah; Rohit C Khanna; Judy E Kim; Van C Lansingh; Janet L Leasher; Nicolas Leveziel; Jennifer Lim; Hans LIMBURG; Julie-Anne Little; Ian McCormick; Alan R Morse; David C Musch; Kovin S Naidoo; Vinay Nangia; Michal Nowak; Maurizio Battaglia Parodi; Konrad Pesudovs; Tunde Peto; Jacqueline Ramke; Pradeep Y Ramulu; Serge Resnikoff; Alan L Robin; Luca Rossetti; Tabassom Sedighi; Janet B Serle; Tueng T Shen; Rita S. Sitorus; Dwight Stambolian; Nina Tahhan; Ian Tapply; Hugh R Taylor; Yih Chung Tham; Fotis Topouzis; Miltiadis K Tsilimbaris; Rohit Varma; Gianni Virgili; Ya Xing Wang; Ningli Wang; Sheila K West; Tien Y Wong; Roger Acevedo-Castellón; Heba AlSawahli; Hery Harimanitra Andriamanjato; Ahmad Ashraf Amalius; Rosario Barrenechea; Fernando Barria von Bisschoffshausen; Ileana Brea; Anthea M Burnett; Seiha Do; Joseph Enyegue oye; Robert P Finger; Marcelo Gallarreta; Aida Giloyan; Olivia OG Gomez; Pedro A Gomez-Bastar; Reeta Gurung; Esmael Habtamu; Levi Kandeke; Jefitha Karimurio; Moses K Kasadhakawo; Joseph L Kerkula; Susan SA Kikira; Sucheta Kulkarni; Van C Lansingh; Nor T Lepcha; Wanjiku C Mathenge; Jean-Aimé Mfungwa Kibala; Nahed Mikki; Sailesh Kumar Mishra; Furahini G Mndeme; Seyed Farzad Mohammadi; Manfred Mörchen; Nasiru Muhammad; János Németh; Joshua FA Owoeye; Yawo S Prempe; Muhammad Mansur Rabiu; Alice V Ramyil; Lutfah Rif'ati; Shalinder Sabherwal; Yuddha D Sapkota; Nicholas J Sargent; Tony O Ukety; Davaatseren Uranchimeg; Anselmo Jacinto Vilanculos; Joseph W Wachira; Min Wu; Biaxiang Xiao; Mariano Yee Melgar; Xiu Juan Zhang

    In: The Lancet Global Health, Vol. 1, Pages 1-10, Elsevier Ltd, 2025.

Fördergeber

BMBF - Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung

01IW23005

BMBF - Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung