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Data Science in a Pandemic Cover
Open Access
|Oct 2023

Abstract

Data Science has the potential to provide humanity with critical insight into the massive data being collected during a pandemic. The COVID-19 pandemic presented that opportunity, and Data Science supported an international audience promptly, reliably, effectively, and frequently during that difficult time. The most significant contributions were data visualizations and data dashboards, however, other tools, such as predictive and prescriptive analytics, were equally critical to the effort. The urgency at the start of the pandemic was to quickly communicate information to citizens, governments, and institutions. The change in modality from traditional statistical metrics and tables to data visualizations was extremely significant and helpful to so many. This paper reviews these contributions by demonstrating how the COVID-19 story unfolded through author-generated data visualizations and dashboards, and by providing the community with open-source access to the scripts that generated these visualizations. The open-source access to the (R language) scripts reflects this article’s novelty in the literature. Using publicly available datasets from multiple sources, and employing R toolkits, the author validates the role that Data Science can play in a pandemic, and that can be implemented by anyone with some basic knowledge of scripting languages, like R. The intent is to provide these valuable tools to the community and to demonstrate their effectiveness in the likely event when there is another crisis.

Language: English
Submitted on: Mar 2, 2023
Accepted on: Oct 3, 2023
Published on: Oct 30, 2023
Published by: Ubiquity Press
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2023 Dennis F. X. Mathaisel, published by Ubiquity Press
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.