Data Science for Social Good (2019)

The 2019 Data Science for Social Good (DSSG) program was made possible with the support from CIFAR, Boeing, and Mitacs, and through project partnerships with the Applied Statistics & Data Science group in the Department of Statistics at UBC, BC Centre for Disease Control, MetroVancouver, National Energy Board of Canada, and City of Surrey.

2019 Projects

 

2019 Fellows

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Raghav Aggarwal

Raghav is an undergrad in Computer Science entering his third year this fall. He transferred from the Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur where he researched opinion mining and sentiment analysis last summer. With DSSG, he aims to broaden his data manipulation and visualization skills while contributing to society. He also wishes to expand his network and understand the perspectives of people in business and arts. He contemplates that data science would be able to solve problems in his home country. In his leisure time, he likes to read, play the guitar and run.

 

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Alex Chow

Alex is a fourth-year honours Sociology student who specializes in quantitative research methods and higher education research. He has a keen interest in using data to identify social inequalities in existing institutions. Through the DSSG program, Alex hopes to learn from and work with the other amazing DSSG fellows to conduct research that is directly applicable to benefiting socially marginalized communities, while honing his technical skills in data and statistical analysis.

 

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Huaiwen Dong

Huaiwen is a recent BSc graduate majoring in Statistics. She developed solid theoretical and technical skills in statistics and data science during her undergraduate years, but the most valuable university experience for her is to explore her interests in social science disciplines. Her internship experience as a macroeconomic researcher and research assistant experience in Sauder School of Business have inspired her in the crucial role of quantitative fields in solving social, political and economic issues as the digital era has brought us channels to generate huge data and methods to acquire, store and explain them. She hopes explore more possibilities in both fields in the DSSG program.

 

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Iris Gao

Iris is a fourth-year student studying Mathematical Sciences at UBC. She has gained experience in data analysis through her co-op experience in Vancouver Coastal Health and her research project with UBC Earth and Ocean Sciences. She believes that data science will play a major role in social development and changing the dynamics in many industries. Her goal as a DSSG fellow is to further develop her skills in machine learning as well as to make an impact on the local health care community. Besides work, Iris enjoys dancing, playing music and cooking.

 

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Laura Greenstreet

Laura will soon be finishing her BSc with honours in Computer Science and Mathematics. She is interested in interdisciplinary problems, especially sustainable resource usage, and its social, environmental and economic impacts. Having previously worked for a non-profit in the agriculture sector, Laura is excited to continue to work on sustainability issues. She is excited to practice and learn new data analysis techniques in the DSSG program and is looking forward to gaining hands-on experience integrating and analyzing multiple datasets. After graduation, Laura plans to pursue a graduate degree in Computer Science. Inspired by her previous non-profit work, Laura plans to return to the non-profit or governmental sectors after completing her graduate studies.

 

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Yingqiu Kuang

Yingqiu Kuang is a PhD Candidate at UBC in political science. Her dissertation research explores emerging economies and global technology governance in international political economy, with a focus on multinational corporations and technology standardization in China and South Korea. She is also a Mitacs Research Fellow at the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada, where she practiced various diverse technical skills to analyze Canada-China clean-tech innovations, bilateral trade and investment, and Canada-China Track II dialogue on energy. Before she came to UBC, she finished her undergraduate study in world history and international relations at Peking University and Waseda University. As a DSSG fellow, she hopes to further learn and apply data analysis and computer programming techniques for social good projects and her own research.

 

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Eugenie Lai

Eugenie is a fourth-year undergraduate student in Business and Computer Science Combined Major. She has enjoyed doing data analysis in the past and is looking forward to putting her business knowledge into practice. She also hopes to pursue graduate studies in data mining, data engineering, or business intelligence. In her spare time, she enjoys baking, hiking, and movies.

 

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Jackie Lam

Jackie recently completed his Bachelor's of International Economics with a minor in Mathematics. Through his studies, he has experience in data analytics in the area of finance and economics. Working as a research assistant, he further augmented his knowledge and gained experience in Natural Language Processing. Jackie hopes to diversify and improve his skillset through the DSSG program and pave his way into a career as a data scientist.

 

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Taeyoon (Harry) Lee

Harry is a MSc student in Statistics. While his research topics are theoretical and foundational in nature, he has developed a great passion for data-driven applications for social good through consulting, data science competitions, and modelling workshops. This same passion led him to an internship at the UN, where he, as a sole statistician, proposed a method and designed a survey for an impact evaluation study of financial training and products on garment factory workers in Laos. Moreover, recently he completed a computer science course, called AI for Social Impact, in which students worked with the City of Vancouver and identified parking inefficiencies using a diverse set of AI and statistical tools. He is ready for another adventure with DSSG.

 

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Lesley Miller

Lesley has just completed her Bachelor of Science degree in the Faculty of Land and Food Systems. During her undergraduate, she worked in two genomics labs focused on biodiversity research as well as contributed to a team tasked with understanding food system resilience in Vancouver. These experiences fostered a strong desire to use her computational skills on projects that promote sustainability, protect the environment and improve the lives of everyday people. As a DSSG Fellow, she is excited to expand her technical skill set while also working on a project that will benefit the public good. When she is not programming or analyzing data, she enjoys cycling and running in Vancouver’s outdoor beauty.

 

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Alexi Rodriguez Arelis

Alexi is a PhD candidate at UBC in the Statistics program at the Faculty of Science. He has a background in Industrial Engineering as well as Applied Statistics. His current research is focused on computer experiments that emulate scientific and engineering systems with Gaussian stochastic processes. He has developed modeling reformulations that seek to improve prediction accuracy, while relying on dimensional analysis and statistical principles from the first half of the 20th century. Alexi hopes to use his time as a DSSG fellow to broaden his current statistical consulting experience in collaborative projects that benefit society.

 

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Gabriel Smith

Gabriel is a PhD student in UBC's Department of Psychology, whose research focuses on mind wandering and the neural mechanisms of thought production. He is also pursuing the quantitative methods specialization in psychology, and hopes to unite his two areas of interest by developing advanced statistical methods with which to analyze both behavioural and neuroimaging data (e.g., machine learning techniques that can be applied to fMRI data). Originally from Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, he loves dogs, board games, Thai food and snow.

 

Musqueam First Nation land acknowledegement

UBC Science acknowledges that the UBC Point Grey campus is situated on the traditional, ancestral, and unceded territory of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm.

Learn more: Musqueam First Nation

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