written by Eric J. Ma on 2016-11-05
Today (Day 1) was the day that talks and posters really started. Hackathon participants missed the first day, in which there was a plenary session of "high-level speakers". A bit of a pity to miss it, but that's okay - the hackathon was more fun.
After delivering the Animal Village hackathon pitch once more in the morning with my teammate Emily Iacobucci, I hung around to learn more about what people in the Emerging Infectious Diseases & Surveillance community are thinking about. I was most interested in what set of tools were being developed, and what problems they solved. Below are my summarized notes.
Talks
For the talks, I focused mostly on the experimental and data collection tools being developed. Also attended one talk on forecasting new emerging diseases - this is like the holy grail of infectious diseases - can we predict where new outbreaks are going to happen? Also in development are genetic tools to manipulate any virus. Key tools I took note of included:
Posters
For the posters, I mainly caught three posters that dealt with data and modelling; most of the other posters were about some specific outbreak in some specific animal or some specific region. These are all good and such; it's just that my nature inclines me towards generalizable topics:
Update from Day 2
The talks that I picked to hear today were centred mostly on data and antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Highlights include the following:
Apart from this, I sat in on Eddy Rubin's talk on the global virome (more like "stood in", it was standing room only). I am convinced that taking a "sequencing everything" approach is likely going to be the key for predictive surveillance. The next step is whether we'll be able to interpret risk from the genome or not, but that'll be the focus of my next post.
@article{
ericmjl-2016-imed-talks,
author = {Eric J. Ma},
title = {IMED 2016 - Talks},
year = {2016},
month = {11},
day = {05},
howpublished = {\url{https://ericmjl.github.io}},
journal = {Eric J. Ma's Blog},
url = {https://ericmjl.github.io/blog/2016/11/5/imed-2016-talks},
}
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