The challenges arising from the collaboration between epidemiological modelers and visualization researchers

Professor Jason Dykes and colleagues reflect on the challenges arising from the collaboration between epidemiological modellers

Academics in City’s giCentre, Professor Jason Dykes, Professor Jo Wood, Dr. Aidan Slingby and Dr. Radu Jianu, have co-authored a research paper published in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A revealing some of the challenges, solutions, and recommendations springing from the collaboration between epidemiological modelers and visualization researchers.

Their paper reports on an ongoing collaboration between epidemiological modelers and visualization researchers by documenting and reflecting upon knowledge constructs—a series of ideas, approaches and methods taken from existing visualization research and practice—deployed and developed to support modeling of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Spatial and temporal scales

This article is part of the theme issue “Technical challenges of modeling real-life epidemics and examples of overcoming these.”

The paper examines many of the issues with which modelers working on the COVID epidemic have had to grapple and how they can be addressed through effective interactive visualization. For example, How much detail should be included in the model?; What data should be used as inputs for the model and using what spatial and temporal scales?; What are the effects of using different datasets and model parameter settings on model outputs—and how do these effects vary? Results of the RAMP activity were fed into SPI-M, the Scientific Pandemic Influenza Group on Modeling.

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