Infoveillance
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Infoveillance is a type of
syndromic surveillance Public health surveillance (also epidemiological surveillance, clinical surveillance or syndromic surveillance) is, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), "the continuous, systematic collection, analysis and interpretation of health-relat ...
that specifically utilizes information found online. The term, along with the term infodemiology, was coined by Gunther Eysenbach to describe research that uses online information to gather information about human behavior. Eysenbach's work using Google Search queries led to the birth of Google Flu Trends, and other search engines have also been used. Other researchers have utilized social media sites such as Twitter to observe disease outbreak patterns. Infoveillance can detect disease outbreaks faster than traditional public health surveillance systems with minimal costs involved.


Types

Infoveillance methods may be either passive or active. Traditional infoveillance data like search engine queries and website navigation behavior are considered passive, as they attempt to recognize trends automatically, without action (or often even awareness) on the part of the internet users who are generating the data for analysis. Active infoveillance occurs when users choose to respond to a survey, enter symptoms into a website or app, or otherwise participate directly in surveillance efforts by contributing additional information.


Examples


Google Health Trends

Beginning in 2008, Google used aggregated search query data to detect influenza trends and compared the results to countries' official surveillance data with the goal of predicting the spread of the flu. In light of evidence that emerged in 2013 showing that Google Flu Trends sometimes substantially overestimated actual flu rates, researchers proposed a series of more advanced and better-performing approaches to flu modeling from Google search queries. Google Flu Trends stopped publishing reports in 2015. Google also used aggregated search query data to detect dengue fever trends. Research has also cast doubt on the accuracy of some of these predictions. Google has continued this work to track and predict the Coronavirus disease 2019, COVID-19 pandemic, creating an Open access, open dataset on COVID-related search queries for use by researchers.


Flu Detector

Other flu prediction projects, including Flu Detector, have come and gone since the advent and removal of Google Flu Trends. Flu Detector was developed by Vasileios Lampos and other researchers at the University of Bristol. It was an application of Machine Learning, machine learning that first used feature selection to automatically extract flu-related terms from Twitter content and then used those terms to compute a flu-score for several UK regions based on geolocated tweets. It also formed the basis for a proposed generalized scheme able to track other events.


Mood of the Nation

Mood of the Nation was also developed by Lampos' team. It performed mood analysis on tweets geo-located in various regions of the United Kingdom by computing on a daily basis scores for four types of emotion: anger, fear, joy and sadness.


Privacy issues

The rise of infoveillance brings up questions about privacy. Privacy concerns are partially dependent on the level of analysis and how data are collected and managed. For instance, individuals may be Data re-identification, re-identifiable from search query datasets that have not been properly De-identification, de-identified. Privacy concerns are increased if data analysis is not done automatically and if search trajectories of individual users are examined.


See also

* Participatory surveillance


References

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External links


"Google Flu Trend""Google Dengue Trend""Flu Detector""Health informatics""JMIR e-collection of peer-reviewed articles on Infodemiology and Infoveillance""JMIR Public Health & Surveillance e-collection of peer-reviewed articles on Infoveillance, Infodemiology and Digital Disease Surveillance"
Internet culture Internet Society people Epidemiology