Transformative tech at medicine’s doorstep
CDDI is part of the larger Cascadia Innovation Corridor initiative, an effort to link the economies of Vancouver, B.C., Seattle and Portland through strategic partnerships.
It’s no secret that technology helps power those economies. Homegrown companies like Microsoft and Amazon are advancing the fields of data science, machine learning and artificial intelligence, and that work is transforming industries worldwide. It’s why the phone in your pocket can tell you how tough the commute home will be or whether you’ll need an umbrella next Tuesday.
Big data powers it all. And it really is big. A computer needs hundreds of thousands of data points to, say, tell the difference between a picture of a cat and a dog.
Cancer research often works on a much smaller scale. “We can see how big data and AI are transforming other industries,” said Dr. Raymond Ng, director of University of British Columbia’s Data Science Institute. “But the transformation hasn’t hit cancer research fully because, in health research, data doesn’t move.”
One clear challenge to data sharing in health research: Researchers often don’t know what’s out there. CDDI has been working to address this challenge by creating a searchable database with information about what data is available at other CDDI-participating institutions. As a pilot project, Fred Hutch is pulling together information about datasets from research groups at BC Cancer, Fred Hutch, UW Medicine, and the OHSU Knight Cancer Institute to develop a search platform prototype.
Think of it as a catalog that shows what multiple institutions have, said Dr. Brenda Kostelecky, director of the Cascadia Data Alliance.
“We’re not asking institutions to share the contents of their library at the outset,” she said. “Rather, you could find out whether other research centers have something you’d want to check out. That can spark new collaborations and shape new research questions.”