Title: Obesity eLab 20090129 Shoaib Sufi
1Obesity e-Lab2009-01-29Shoaib Sufi
2The Obesity Problem
- Obesity is associated with many illnesses and is
directly related to increased mortality and lower
life expectancy - It is commonly defined as a body mass index (BMI)
of 30 kg/m2 or higher - In the UK tackling Obesity is a government wide
priority - 'The anticipated growth in obesity in almost all
segments of the population is quite alarming, and
the analyses of the Health Survey for England
give a strong impression of continued inexorable
growth' - Foresight, Tackling Obesities Future Choices -
Modelling Future Trends in Obesity Their
Impacct on Health (2nd edition) Government Office
for Science - Not just about Growing rates Epidemiologists,
Social researchers and Public health officials
want to understand (and try to control) the
reasons beyond eating too much and not
excercising or distal factors which cause an
increase in Obesity rates. A diagram created from
a review of outcomes of Foresight Tackling
Obesities project shows the identified 108
factors which drive obesity.
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4How Researchers work
Results
Data
Analysis Models
Publications
Data is Key this is where it starts
5Digital Dust (data deposit gt use)
Surveys
Research
Clinical
Public Health
Deposit
Use
NHS Partners Data Tombs
6It starts with Data Health Surveys
- Surveys under used and difficult to manage
- Health Survey for England HSE
- British Household Panel Survey - BHPS
- Within the same survey
- Hard to Navigate
- Cryptic label
- Metadata separate from data (cross-referencing)
- Differences
- Labeling of the same concept year to year
- Differing in measurement technique of the same
concept from year to year - value domains of same concept different year to
year
7Data Issues continued
- Across Surveys many issues
- Matching concepts across surveys
- Matching value domains
- Combinatorial effect of mapping the whole space
- conceptssurvey yearsnumber of surveys - not
feasible for just one researcher or group! - Once portion of interest done not easy to reuse
by the person themselves (e.g. 6 months later) or
to share. - What's needed Just Enough (mapping), Just In Time
(when you need it) and Just Shareable (to
co-workers or the community) i.e. Data
Methodologies
8Understanding Surveys
9Data Methodologies
10Benefits
- Allows sets of mappings to be shared and added to
allowing collaborative building of Data
methodologies - Does not get rid of the problem in surveys but
allows a mechanism for capturing the
re-conciliation process in a structured manner so
it is not ad-hoc or bespoke - Allow re-discovery by the original author
- Saves time time better spent doing research and
not data manipulation/harmonisation.
11 After Data ...
- Once you have access to data in a sensible form
then - You want to analyse data through various common
categories and patterns of analysis Analysis
Methodologies - You want to visualise the data or the analysis
common charts spatial-temporal mapping
Visualisation Methodologies - Necessary pre-conditions making things explicit
that are normally implicit. Frames of reference
or earlier research Reference Methodology.
12Obesity e-Lab Architecture
User
Research Questions Answers
Obesity e-Lab Workbench
Value
Composing, Sharing, Collaborating
Data Method
Analysis Method
Visualisation Method
Reference Method
Survey xWalks
Analysis Catalogue
Charts, Maps, Output areas ...
PubMed, ...
Data, Surveys, Analysis, GIS, Publications
Survey Providers
13How e-Labs will help future Obesity analysis
- Sharing types of analysis
- Chaining common analysis
- Shared understanding in research group
- Better publication
- Built to be repeatable
- Types of Analysis (Epidemiology nomenclature)
- Descriptions
- Distributions
- Trends
- Associations
- etc
- Aim is to cover the 20 of the space of
Epidemiologics/Social Researchers/Public Health
people that gives 80 of the value/usage.
14Obesity e-Lab workbench (WiP)
Concepts
Analysis Chaining
Concept Mapping
Sharing
Visualised Results
Building the RO's
15Clear Public Good
Unclear Public Good
Research Objects
Research
Depersonalise
e-Lab Population
Health Records
Health Records
Local Ownership
Asset Enrichment
16Obesity e-Lab going forward
- Standing on the shoulders of many Giants
simultaneously ! - Obesity e-Lab is an instance of an e-Lab
- Built upon same principles
- Notion of RO as common currency
- Linked with like minded project to allow creation
of inter-operable pieces - Users and Social researchers are excited about
the prospect of such a tool - Easy re-use and re-purposing of work
- Possible use by data providers to create
definitive concept maps - Save time get on with research
17Obesity e-Lab Overview
- Obesity is associated with many illnesses and is
directly related to increased mortality and lower
life expectancy. - Due to the nature of health related survey data
there is an underuse of large health survey data
(e.g. The Health Survey for England). - If access and understanding of information inside
surveys were made easier the use of such survey
data could dramatically increaed. - Obesity e-Lab aims to lower the barrier of entry
to data, analysis and visualisation around survey
data, allowing deeper analysis and thus better
policy decisions with a focus on the Obesity
problem. - Obesity e-Lab is an instance of an e-Lab built
using a common format (Research Objects) and
service notions. - Research Objects allow a replayable, shareable,
descriptive and methodological understanding of
research outcomes.
18Questions
19Index Slide
- The Obesity Problem
- Current Analysis Problems
- Proposed Solutions
- Why e-Labs are the right approach
- Research Object for Sharing
- Common technology landscape
- How e-Lab will help the future Analysis
- Current Models of Surveys and Methodologies
- Software RoadMap
- Current Screens