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Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Student Team Earns First Place in U.S. Health Data Platform Competition
Four Graduate Students in the Tetherless World
Constellation at Rensselaer Recognized for the Application They
Developed in U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Challenge
Four graduate students in the Tetherless World Constellation
at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute recently earned the top
prize in a national health data platform challenge designed to
create new functionalities for the U.S. Dept. of Health and
Human Services’ (HHS) repository for open health data:
healthdata.gov.
The goal for students and others in the competition was to
make high-value health data more accessible to entrepreneurs,
researchers, and policy makers in the hopes of better health
outcomes for all.
The four students won the $20,000 first prize in the Health
Data Platform
challenge designed by the Office of the National
Coordinator for Health Information Technology within HHS. The
students earned the honor in the so-called Metadata Challenge
component of the competition, which was designed to facilitate
the application of common metadata standards to all open
government data.
“Our team leveraged many of the methodologies and tools from
RPI’s Tetherless World and the Web Science Center to quickly
integrate a wide range of data, maintain its provenance, and
provide value by understanding not just the values in the data
files but also what those values represent,” said Rensselaer
Tetherless World Constellation Professor Deborah L. McGuinness.
“The students worked well as a team to create a result that was
much more impressive than any of them could do alone. They
integrated their technical contributions and created an
end-to-end process and tool suite that we are now using on
other sets of data, so they not only contributed to HHS but
also left behind a platform that others can use.”
The Rensselaer students developed an application
that used what is known as the healthdata.gov Application
Programming Interface and the complete catalog of datasets on
the federal website to create multiple resources for organizing
data and automating many of the data processes. They presented
a set of in-house developed
tools enabling the discovery of, access to, and integration
of HHS datasets as Linked Government Data.
The four Rensselaer graduate students are:
- James McCusker – Computer Science graduate student
- Timothy Lebo – Cognitive Science graduate student
- Alvaro Graves – Cognitive Science graduate student
- Kristine Gloria – Cognitive Science graduate student
McCusker and Lebo are students who study under McGuinness,
while Graves and Gloria study under Tetherless World
Constellation Professor Jim Hendler. McGuinness was the primary
faculty member working with the students during the
competition. John Erickson, director of web science operations
within the constellation, also worked with the students, and
Research Associate Professor Joanne Luciano contributed
research. All are members of the Web Science Research
Center at Rensselaer, which is directed by McGuinness.
Established in 2007, the
Tetherless World Constellation at Rensselaer is working
toward a vision of an increasingly Web-accessible world in
which interactive information and communication is not
“tethered” to one location or device such as a personal
computer. The constellation is working to move toward this
vision by seeking to better understand the World Wide Web, help
engineer its future, and ensure its social benefits.
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Published
February 22,
2013 |
Contact: Mark Marchand
Phone: (518) 276-6098
E-mail: marchm3@rpi.edu |
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