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Google searches track flu spread | Google searches track flu spread |
(about 3 hours later) | |
Google's philanthropic arm Google.org has released a new site that tracks the incidence of flu in the US based on terms used in Google searches. | Google's philanthropic arm Google.org has released a new site that tracks the incidence of flu in the US based on terms used in Google searches. |
The system uses aggregated, anonymous results from searches for flu-related terms and plots their locations. | The system uses aggregated, anonymous results from searches for flu-related terms and plots their locations. |
The approach, validated against Centers for Disease Control (CDC) flu records, provides timely data that could be two weeks ahead of government figures. | The approach, validated against Centers for Disease Control (CDC) flu records, provides timely data that could be two weeks ahead of government figures. |
The site, which is free to use, will pass the early-warning data to the CDC. | The site, which is free to use, will pass the early-warning data to the CDC. |
Hundreds of billions of Google searches from 2003 onwards were used to develop the model, which was then compared with CDC data on outbreaks. | Hundreds of billions of Google searches from 2003 onwards were used to develop the model, which was then compared with CDC data on outbreaks. |
"Our team found that certain aggregated search queries tend to be very common during flu season each year," Google said in their official blog on the topic. | "Our team found that certain aggregated search queries tend to be very common during flu season each year," Google said in their official blog on the topic. |
"We compared these aggregated queries against data provided by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and we found that there's a very close relationship between the frequency of these search queries and the number of people who are experiencing flu-like symptoms each week." | "We compared these aggregated queries against data provided by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and we found that there's a very close relationship between the frequency of these search queries and the number of people who are experiencing flu-like symptoms each week." |
Traditional survey techniques employed by the CDC take about two weeks to precisely identify outbreaks, and Google hopes that its data, based on a stream of current searches, will serve as an early warning system that the CDC can then act upon. | Traditional survey techniques employed by the CDC take about two weeks to precisely identify outbreaks, and Google hopes that its data, based on a stream of current searches, will serve as an early warning system that the CDC can then act upon. |
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