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The Technology Behind Bitcoins $1 Trillion Valuation And Its Application Beyond Cryptocurrency – Forbes

internet security and data protection concept, cybersecurity

Now a trillion-dollar asset, bitcoin is paramount to cryptocurrency culture after its60%hike this month, surpassing any traditional asset in this record-breaking milestone.

Since its introduction to the financial market in 2009, this first-of-its-kind cryptocurrency has been marked by high volatility and price fluctuations. Being a highly speculative asset, U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has stressed the need for regulating any institution that handles bitcoins and investor protection in a recent CNBC interview. Despite the lack of regulation and vulnerability to scams and illicit transactions, a mixture of social proofing and celebrity endorsements has catapulted its popularity among investors and the masses.

But behind bitcoin is the ingenious blockchain technology that enables this unprecedented digital asset. The symbiotic relationship between bitcoin and blockchain is so apparent that people often confuse the two. Simply put, without blockchain, bitcoin is useless. With each bitcoin transaction, a digital trail is created on a shared ledger. Though the transaction itself is open and public, the persons identity behind the bitcoin transaction is encrypted and remains private. As transactions are posted on this digital ledger, a perpetual chain of anonymous and real-time transactions is created.

Though blockchain technology is most prominently recognized with its application to bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, other use cases are taking precedence, particularly within supply chain management.

As seen with Covid-19, supply chain disruption is a critical risk that has an enormous impact on a companys operations and bottom line, especially for those that operate very complex and global supply chains with multiple intermediaries. The slightest hiccup in production can disrupt supply chain operations in mass proportion, creating fluctuations in lead times that can either cause supply shortages or tie up money in excess inventory.

Even with the most sophisticated ERP software, there is still a potential for information to be locked in silos, disparate processes, unnecessary paper trails, miscommunication between partners, and untraceable documents and activities. Streamlining the entire supply chain network would require integrating all software and systems across various suppliers, retailers, manufacturers, financial institutions, logistic providers, and regions to speak the same language. Essentially, all parties would be required to integrate the same system of record for every step of the supply chain process, which is highly impractical.

Blockchain solves this problem by greatly enhancing supply chain visibility and traceability within a complex supply chain network. All parties would have access to the blockchain with secure and synchronized data, including full transparency of every action being performed in real-time during end-to-end supply chain activity. As a result, leaders can quickly trace every single component of production and financial transactions, identify any existing bottlenecks, and quickly pivot to avoid certain risks that could cause disruption.

Blockchain is currently being used across various industries to transform supply chains ranging from food and agriculture, retail, aerospace, and even Covid-19 vaccinations!

Since theFDAauthorized the first emergency use of the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 Vaccine to be administered in the U.S. in December 2020, the rollout of Covid-19 vaccines has been underway. Subsequently, decision-makers have been rallying to make the vaccination available to every adult in the U.S. by theend of summer 2021.The World Health Organization also announced its global effort to provide rapid and equitable access to2 billion Covid-19 vaccination dosesfor all countries by the end of 2021.

With this enormous feat, the deployment of advanced technology to enable vaccination logistics is essential. The vaccination supply chain has barriers that includea lack of transparency, traceability, and real-time information coordination. According to CDC Director Rochelle Walensky, one of the biggest problems right now is I cant tell you how much vaccine we have, and if I cant tell it to you then I cant tell it to the governors and I cant tell it to the state health officials.

Leveraging blockchain is a solution to this problem. In fact, two hospitals in the U.K. have already beenreportedusing blockchain to increase visibility into the supply chain logistics of vaccines by tracing temperature-controlled Covid-19 vaccinations and synchronizing data for real-time status updates on shipments for distribution and administration.

In the food industry, blockchain is being used to enhance traceability and transparency to reduce inventory loss by tracking the source of contaminated food, from farm and manufacturing to retail.Since 2019, Walmart and Sams Club made it a business requirement for suppliers to use IBM Blockchain as apart of their supplier agreements to allow transparent information among diverse suppliers in the supply chain network. Other names in the food industry who are using IBM Blockchain include Nestl and Tyson Foods.

Theretail and consumer goods industryalso uses blockchain to reduce losses due to counterfeit goods and allow supply chain partners to trace products in different locations. And in theaerospace sector, leaders leverage blockchain to streamline material traceability for parts acceptance from FAA and non-FAA certified sources and trace aircraft material requirements.

Though Bitcoin is the earliest application of blockchain technology, its implementation beyond cryptocurrencies positions it as one of the futures leading technologies that will transform the way businesses operate in years to come.

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The Technology Behind Bitcoins $1 Trillion Valuation And Its Application Beyond Cryptocurrency - Forbes

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Janet Yellen rips into Bitcoin, calls it highly speculative and inefficient – Economic Times

MUMBAI: The US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen today ripped into the worlds most famous and highest valued cryptocurrency Bitcoin as she termed it highly speculative and inefficient for transaction.

Bitcoin is an extremely inefficient way of conducting transactions and the amount of energy that's consumed in processing those transactions is staggering," Yellen said at the 2021 DealBook DC Policy Project.

Yellens comments came as carnage ensued in the cryptocurrency world with Bitcoin plummeting 16 per cent and Ethereum sinking more than 20 per cent on the cryptocurrency exchanges.

The former chief of the US Federal Reserve also said that it was time for the US treasury department to study the merits of a digital dollar currency. Yellen said that a digital dollar, maintained by the US Federal Reserve and based on a blockchain, could result in faster, safer and cheaper payments.

Yellens comments are the latest salvo by high-ranking government and central bank officials in advanced economies against cryptocurrencies.

Recently, European Central Bank chief Christine Lagarde had blasted cryptocurrencies for felicitating illicit finance. For those who had assumed that it might turn into a currency -- terribly sorry, but this is an asset and its a highly speculative asset which has conducted some funny business and some interesting and totally reprehensible money-laundering activity, Lagarde said in an online event organized by Reuters.

Supporters of Bitcoin have argued that the cryptocurrency provides a decentralised way of conducting finance and liberates the financial system from the inefficiencies caused by centralised finance.

The blockchain technology that underpins Bitcoin is considered to be one of the most path-breaking technological innovations in recent decades. Recently, investors have also argued that Bitcoin's limited supply makes it a better store of value compared to the fiat currency and even gold.

Elon Musk-owned Tesla had recently disclosed that it converted a portion of its cash into Bitcoin and may accept it as payment in the future for its product.

Bitcoin prices had more than doubled in the previous one month prior to todays fall and hit a market capitalisation of $1 trillion. At CoinDesk, a Bitcoin was quoting $51,894, down 11 per cent.

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Bitcoin poses no threat to the dollar as the world’s currency leader, Fed’s Bullard says – CNBC

St. Louis Federal Reserve President James Bullard told CNBC on Tuesday he believes increasing interest in bitcoin does not pose a serious threat to the U.S. dollar as the world's reserve currency.

"I just think for Fed policy, it's going to be a dollar economy as far as the eye can see a dollar global economy really as far as the eye can see and whether the gold price goes up or down, or the bitcoin price goes up or down, doesn't really affect that," Bullard said on "Squawk Box."

Bitcoin, in particular, has been championed by crypto bulls as a store of value that can be used to hedge against inflation or the debasement of fiat currencies like the dollar. Some have touted it as "digital gold." In addition, bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies also present themselves as a way to buy goods and services like actual money.

Bullard, who has led the St. Louis Fed since 2008, expressed concerns about widespread transactions using a range of cryptocurrencies that are not issued by governments. "Dollars can be traded electronically already, so I'm not sure that's really the issue here. The issue is privately issued currency," he said.

Before the Civil War, it was common for banks to issue their own notes, Bullard said. He likened it to Bank of America, JPMorgan and Wells Fargo all having distinct brands of dollars. "They were all trading around and they traded at different discounts to each other, and people did not like it at all," he said.

"I think the same thing would occur with bitcoin here," Bullard said. "You don't want to go to a nonuniform currency where you're walking into Starbucks and maybe you'll pay with ethereum, maybe you'll pay with ripple, maybe you'll pay with bitcoin, maybe you'll pay with a dollar. That isn't how we do this. We have a uniform currency that came in at the Civil War time."

Bullard's comments happened shortly after the price of bitcoin eclipsed $50,000 per coin for the first time. The latest leg higher for bitcoin follows moves into the crypto space by established financial firmssuch asBNY MellonandMastercard.

Tesla also announced last week it bought $1.5 billion worth of bitcoin using cash on its balance sheet and planned to accept the digital coin as payment for its products. The electric vehicle maker's action was viewed by some as another major step toward broad acceptance of bitcoin, which is the world's largest digital currency by market value.

While Uberdoesn't plan to buy bitcoin as an investment, CEO Dara Khosrowshahisaid it's possible the ride hailing and food delivery company would eventually allow customers to pay with digital coins. "Just like we accept all kinds of local currency, we are going to look at cryptocurrency and/or bitcoin in terms of currency to transact," Khosrowshahi told CNBC on Thursday. "That we'll certainly look at and if there's a benefit there, if there's a need there, we'll do it. We're just not going to do it as part of a promotion."

When considering whether cryptocurrencies present a threat to the dollar, Bullard stressed there's nothing new about competition. It's something that has gone on for centuries, he said. "It is a currency competition, and investors want a safe haven. They want a stable store of value, and then they want to conduct their investments in that currency," the St. Louis Fed president said.

For example, he contended both the euro and the yen are strong currencies. However, "neither of those is going to replace the dollar," he said. "It'd be very hard to get a private currency that's really more like gold to play that role so I don't think we're going to see any changes in the future."

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Participating in SoftBank/ Correlation One Initiative – Miami – City of Miami

Published on February 22, 2021

(Miami, FL - February 22, 2021)-The City of Miami has been named as a participant in Data Science for All / Empowerment (DS4A / Empowerment), a new effort designed to upskill and prepare job-seekers from underserved communities for data science careers. The initiative is being backed by SoftBank Group International (SoftBank) as part of its AI Academy, and was developed by Correlation One. It aims to train at least 10,000 people from underrepresented communities including Greater Miami over the next three years, providing new pathways to economic opportunity in the worlds fastest-growing industries.

We need talent with a deep understanding of data science to build the companies of the future, said Marcelo Claure, CEO of SoftBank Group International. Were proud to support this effort, continue to upskill our portfolio companies and train more than 10,000 people from underrepresented communities with critical technical skills.

SoftBanks AI Academy supports programs that supplement theoretical training of traditional technical education courses with practical lessons, including AI and data skills that can be immediately applied to common business needs.

DS4A / Empowerment will provide training for SoftBank Group International portfolio company employees, including portfolio companies of the Opportunity Fund and Latin America Fund, as well as external candidates from the U.S. and Latin America. The program is specifically designed to address talent and equity gaps in a field that has historically been inaccessible for many workers, leading to significant underrepresentation of women and non-white individuals. Participants work on real-world case studies that are expected to have measurable impact on the operational performance of participating companies.

IDB Lab will join SoftBank by providing over ten full-ride Fellowships to underrepresented candidates in Latin America while the Miami-Dade Beacon Council will provide four full-ride fellowships for underrepresented candidates based in Miami.

In addition, The City of Miami will join as an impact partner by providing twenty fellowships to Miami talent and five fellowships to public sector workers.

"As Miami grows as a tech hub, it is important that we empower local entrepreneurs and the public sector to leverage the power of AI. We are proud to support the building of a diverse data-fluent community in Miami through our partnership with Correlation One and SoftBank, said Francis Suarez, the Mayor of Miami.

Participants in the program will receive 13 weeks of data and analytics training (plus optional Python training) while working on case studies and projects, including projects submitted by SoftBank portfolio companies. The initiative will also connect participants with mentors who will provide professional development and career coaching. At the end of the program, external participants will be connected with employment opportunities at SoftBank and leading enterprises across business, financial services, technology, healthcare, consulting, and consumer sectors.

Miamis success hinges on dramatically expanding opportunity across our community and building a workforce with the skills for the jobs of tomorrow, said Matt Haggman, Executive Vice President of The Beacon Council. This program is an important step towards creating the innovative and equitable future we can - and must - achieve.

Training our residents to take on the jobs of the future is critical to ensuring that economic growth is shared across all communities, and to building our local talent so that more leading companies in fields like tech and data science can put down roots in Miami-Dade, said Daniella Levine-Cava, Miami-Dade County's Mayor. Im thrilled that this program is unlocking opportunities in a field that has historically been inaccessible for so many, and creating new, inclusive pathways to prosperity in one of the worlds fastest-growing industries.

The COVID-19 pandemic has both accelerated demand for data science talent and exacerbated the access gaps that kept so many aspiring workers locked out of opportunity, said Rasheed Sabar and Sham Mustafa, Co-CEOs and Co-Founders of Correlation One. We are grateful to work with innovative employers like SoftBank that are stepping up to play a more direct role in helping the workforce prepare themselves for jobs of the future.

Program and Registration DetailsDS4A Empowerment is an online program delivered in English over a 13-week period. Classes will convene on Saturdays from 10:00am to 8:00pm ET, beginning on April 17, 2021.Registration for the program ends on March 7, 2021. Candidates who should consider applying include employees of SoftBank affiliated portfolio companies in the region as well as software engineers, technical product managers, technical marketers, and anyone with a STEM background who is interested in learning data analysis. To apply and find out more information about the program, interested candidates can visit the official DS4A Empowerment website:https://c1-web.correlation-one.com/ds4a-empowermentFor program related inquiries, please contactds4aempowerment@correlation-one.com.

About SoftBankThe SoftBank Group invests in breakthrough technology to improve the quality of life for people around the world. The SoftBank Group is comprised of SoftBank Group Corp. (TOKYO: 9984), an investment holding company that includes telecommunications, internet services, AI, smart robotics, IoT and clean energy technology providers; the SoftBank Vision Funds, which are investing up to $100 billion to help extraordinary entrepreneurs transform industries and shape new ones; and the SoftBank Latin America Fund, the largest venture fund in the region. To learn more, please visithttps://global.softbankAbout Correlation OneCorrelation One is on a mission to build the most equitable vocational school of the future. We believe that data literacy is the most important skill for the future of work. We make data fluency a competitive edge for firms through global data science competitions, rigorous data skills assessments, and enterprise-focused data science training.

Correlation One's solutions are used by some of the most elite employers all around the world in finance, technology, healthcare, insurance, consulting and governmental agencies. Since launching in 2015, Correlation One has built an expert community of 250,000+ data scientists and 600+ partnerships with leading universities and data science organizations in the US, UK, Canada, China, and Latin America.

https://www.correlation-one.com/about

Media Contacts:

For SoftBank:Laura Gaviria HalabyLaura.gaviria@softbank.com

City for Miami Media:Stephanie Severinosseverino@miamigov.com

For Beacon Council:Maria Budetmbudet@beaconcouncil.com

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SoftBank Joins Initiative to Train Diverse Talent in Data Science and AI – Entrepreneur

The alliance aims to train and improve the skills of underrepresented communities seeking opportunity.

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February18, 20213 min read

SoftBank Group Corp, as part of its Academy of Artificial Intelligence (AI), announced on February 18 its support for Data Science for All / Empowerment (DS4A / Empowerment, for its acronym in English). This alliance aims to train and improve the skills of underrepresented communities seeking opportunities in the field of data science.

Developed by Correlation One, DS4A / Empowerment aims to train 10,000 people giving priority to Afro-descendants, Latinos, women, LGBTQ + and United States military veterans, over the next three years, providing new paths to economic opportunities in one of the fastest growing industries in the world.

The SoftBank AI Academy supports programs that complement the theoretical training of traditional technical education courses with practical lessons, including artificial intelligence and data management skills that can be immediately applied to business needs.

DS4A / Empowerment will provide training to employees of SoftBank Group International portfolio companies, including the Opportunity Fund and Latam Fund, as well as external candidates from the United States and Latin America, including Mexico.

The program is specifically designed to address gender equity and talent gaps in a field that has historically been inaccessible to many people, leading to a significant under -representation of women and Afro-descendants. Participants will work on real case studies that are expected to have a measurable impact on the operating performance of participating companies.

IDB Lab, the innovation laboratory of the Inter-American Development Bank Group, will join SoftBank and provide more than 10 full scholarships to underrepresented candidates in Latin America, while Beacon Council will offer 4 full scholarships for underrepresented candidates based in Miami.

Program participants will receive 13 weeks of data and analytics training (including optional Python training) while working on case studies and projects, including projects presented by SoftBank's portfolio of companies. The initiative will also link participants with mentors who will provide career development and guidance. Upon completion of the program, external participants will be connected to employment opportunities at SoftBank and leading companies in the business, financial services, technology, healthcare, consulting and consumer sectors.

DS4A Empowerment is an online program taught in English over a period of 13 weeks. Classes will be held on Saturdays from 10:00 am to 8:00 pm (Eastern Time, ET), beginning April 17, 2021.

The program registration period ends on March 7, 2021. Applicants who might consider applying include employees from the portfolio of companies affiliated with SoftBank in the region, as well as software engineers, technical product managers, technical marketers and anyone with a background in STEM who is interested in learning data analysis. To apply and learn more about the program, interested candidates can visit the official website of DS4A Empowerment .

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Increasing Access to Care with the Help of Big Data | Research Blog – Duke Today

Artificial intelligence (AI) and data science have the potential to revolutionize global health. But what exactly is AI and what hurdles stand in the way of more widespread integration of big data in global health? Dukes Global Health Institute (DGHI) hosted a Think Global webinar Wednesday, February 17th to dive into these questions and more.

The webinars panelists were Andy Tatem (Ph.D), Joao Vissoci (Ph.D.), and Eric Laber (Ph.D.), moderated by DGHIs Director of Research Design and Analysis Core, Liz Turner (Ph.D.). Tatem is a professor of spatial demography and epidemiology at the University of South Hampton and director of WorldPop. Vissoci is an assistant professor of surgery and global health at Duke University. Laber is a professor of statistical science and bioinformatics at Duke.

Tatem, Vissoci, and Laber all use data science to address issues in the global health realm. Tatems work largely utilizes geospatial data sets to help inform global health decisions like vaccine distribution within a certain geographic area. Vissoci, who works with the GEMINI Lab at Duke (Global Emergency Medicine Innovation and Implementation Research), tries to leverage secondary data from health systems in order to understand issues of access to and distribution of care, as well as care delivery. Laber is interested in improving decision-making processes in healthcare spaces, attempting to help health professionals synthesize very complex data via AI.

All of their work is vital to modern biomedicine and healthcare, but, Turner said, AI means a lot of different things to a lot of different people. Laber defined AI in healthcare simply as using data to make healthcare better. From a data science perspective, Vissoci said, [it is] synthesizing data an automated way to give us back information. This returned info is digestible trends and understandings derived from very big, very complex data sets. Tatem stated that AI has already revolutionized what we can do and said it is powerful if it is directed in the right way.

We often get sucked into a science-fiction version of AI, Laber said, but in actuality it is not some dystopian future but a set of tools that maximizes what can be derived from data.

However, as Tatem stated, [AI] is not a magic, press a button scenario where you get automatic results. A huge part of work for researchers like Tatem, Vissoci, and Laber is the harmonization of working with data producers, understanding data quality, integrating data sets, cleaning data, and other back-end processes.

This comes with many caveats.

Bias is a huge problem, said Laber. Vissoci reinforced this, stating that the models built from AI and data science are going to represent what data sources they are able to access bias included. We need better work in getting better data, Vissoci said.

Further, there must be more up-front listening to and communication with end-users from the very start of projects, Tatem outlined. By taking a step back and listening, tools created through AI and data science may be better met with actual uptake and less skepticism or distrust. Vissoci said that direct engagement with the people on the ground transforms data into meaningful information.

Better structures for meandering privacy issues must also be developed. A major overhaul is still needed, said Laber. This includes things like better consent processes for patients to understand how their data is being used, although Tatem said this becomes very complex when integrating data.

Nonetheless the future looks promising and each panelist feels confident that the benefits will outweigh the difficulties that are yet to come in introducing big data to global health. One cool example Vissoci gave of an ongoing project deals with the influence of environmental change through deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon on the impacts of Indigenous populations. Through work with heavy multidimensional data, Vissoci and his team also have been able to optimize scarcely distributed Covid vaccine resource to use in areas where they can have the most impact.

Laber envisions a world with reduced or even no clinical trials if randomization and experimentation are integrated directly into healthcare systems. Tatem noted how he has seen extreme growth in the field in just the last 10 to 15 years, which seems only to be accelerating.

A lot of this work has to do with making better decisions about allocating resources, as Turner stated in the beginning of the panel. In an age of reassessment about equity and access, AI and data science could serve to bring both to the field of global health.

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Rochester to advance research in biological imaging through new grant – University of Rochester

February 22, 2021

A new multidisciplinary collaboration between the University of Rochesters departments of biology, biomedical engineering, and optics and the Goergen Institute for Data Science will establish an innovative microscopy resource on campus, allowing for cutting-edge scientific research in biological imaging.

Michael Welte, professor and chair of the Department of Biology, is the lead principal investigator of the project, which was awarded a $1.2 million grant from the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation.

The grant supports an endeavor at the intersection of optics, data science, and biomedical research, and the University of Rochester is very strong in these areas, Welte says. The University has a highly collaborative culture, and the close proximity of our college and medical center makes Rochester ideally suited to lead advances in biological imaging.

The project will include developing and building a novel light-sheet microscope that employs freeform optical designs devised at Rochester. The microscope, which will be housed in a shared imaging facility in Goergen Hall and is expected to be online in 2022, enables three-dimensional imaging of complex cellular structures in living samples. Researchers and engineers will continually improve the microscope, and it will eventually become a resource for the entire campus research community.

The optical engineers working on this project will take light-sheet technology into new domains, says Scott Carney, professor of optics and director of Rochesters Institute of Optics, who is a co-principal investigator on the project. They will transform a precise, high-end microscope into a workhorse for biologists working at the cutting edge of their disciplines to make discoveries about the very fabric of life at the cellular and subcellular level.

The microscope will produce large amounts of data that will require new methods to better collect, analyze, and store the images.

These efforts will focus on developing algorithms for computational optical imaging and automated biological image analysis, as well as on big data management, says Mujdat Cetin, a professor of electrical and computer engineering and the Robin and Tim Wentworth Director of the Goergen Institute for Data Science. Cetin is also a co-principal investigator on the project.

While many other research microscopes illuminate objects pixel by pixel, light-sheet technology illuminates an entire plane at once. The result is faster imaging with less damage to samples, enabling researchers to study biological processes in ways previously out of reach.

In addition to funding the construction of the microscope and development of the data science component, the grant from the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation supports three biological research projects:

Not only am I excited about each of the individual projectsfrom intimate looks at bacteria to finding new ways to analyze imagesI am absolutely thrilled about the prospect of building something even bigger and better via the close collaboration of disciplines Rochester excels at individually: optics, data science, and biomedical research, Welte says. I believe this joint endeavor is only the first in a long line that will establish Rochester as a leader in biological imaging.

Tags: Anne S. Meyer, Arts and Sciences, Dan Bergstralh, Department of Biology, Goergen Institute for Data Science, grant, Hajim School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, James McGrath, Michael Welte, Mujdat Cetin, Richard Waugh, Scott Carney

Category: Science & Technology

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Learn About Innovations in Data Science and Analytic Automation on an Upcoming Episode of the Advancements Series – Yahoo Finance

Explore the importance of analytics in digital transformation efforts.

JUPITER, Fla., Feb. 18, 2021 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- The award-winning series, Advancements with Ted Danson, will focus on recent developments in data science technology, in an upcoming episode, scheduled to broadcast 2Q/2021.

In this segment, Advancements will explore how Alteryx uses data science to enable its customers to solve analytics use cases. Viewers will also learn how Alteryx accelerates digital transformation outcomes through analytics and data science automation. Spectators will see how, regardless of user skillset, the code-free and code-friendly platform empowers a self-service approach to upskill workforces, while speeding analytic and high-impact outcomes at scale.

"As digital transformation accelerates across the globe, the ability to unlock critical business insights through analytics is of the utmost importance in achieving meaningful outcomes," said Alan Jacobson, chief data and analytics officer of Alteryx. "Alteryx allows data workers at almost any experience level to solve complex problems with analytics and automate processes for business insights and quick wins. We look forward to sharing our story with the Advancements audience and to exploring how analytics and data science will shape the technology landscape of the future."

The segment will also uncover how the platform accelerates upskilling across the modern workforce, while furthering digital transformation initiatives and leveraging data science analytics to drive social outcomes.

"As a proven leader in analytics and data science automation, we look forward to highlighting Alteryx and to educating viewers about the importance of analytics," said Richard Lubin, senior producer for Advancements.

About Alteryx: As a leader in analytic process automation (APA), Alteryx unifies analytics, data science, and business process automation in one, end-to-end platform to accelerate digital transformation. Organizations of all sizes, all over the world, rely on the Alteryx Analytic Process Automation Platform to deliver high-impact business outcomes and the rapid upskilling of the modern workforce. Alteryx is a registered trademark of Alteryx, Inc. All other product and brand names may be trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners.

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For more information visit http://www.alteryx.com.

About Advancements and DMG Productions: The Advancements series is an information-based educational show targeting recent advances across a number of industries and economies. Featuring state-of-the-art solutions and important issues facing today's consumers and business professionals, Advancements focuses on cutting-edge developments, and brings this information to the public with the vision to enlighten about how technology and innovation continue to transform our world.

Backed by experts in various fields, DMG Productions is dedicated to education and advancement, and to consistently producing commercial-free, educational programming on which both viewers and networks depend.

For more information, please visit http://www.AdvancementsTV.com or call Richard Lubin at 866-496-4065.

Media Contact

Sarah McBrayer, DMG Productions, 866-496-4065, info@advancementstv.com

SOURCE Advancements with Ted Danson

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Symposium aimed at leveraging the power of data science for promoting diversity – Penn State News

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. Data science can be a useful tool and powerful ally in enhancing diversity. A group of data scientists are holding Harnessing the Data Revolution to Enhance Diversity, a symposium aimed at discussing the issues, identifying opportunities and initiating the next steps toward improving equity and diversity in academia at the undergraduate and faculty levels.

The online event, organized by the Institute for Computational and Data Sciences and co-sponsored by the Office of the Vice Provost for Educational Equity and the Center for Social Data Analytics, will be held from 1 to 3:30 p.m. on March 16 and 17, and is scheduled to include 10 30-minute talks and a roundtable discussion. Organizers added that the event is designed to help form new collaborations and identify cutting-edge approaches that can enhance diversity at Penn State and in higher education across the country.

This symposium will bring together researchers from across the computational and social sciences to explore how we can build more diverse communities of researchers that are sensitive to how computational and data science can shape how diverse populations are impacted by change, said Jenni Evans, professor ofmeteorology and atmospheric scienceand ICDS director.

Speakers from across the U.S. will discuss issues ranging from quantifying and contextualizing diversity-related issues to examining approaches that have and havent worked in academia.

Ed O'Brien, associate professor of chemistry and ICDS co-hire, said data science offers several tools to promote diversity, equity and inclusion.

This symposium is bringing together diverse academic communities to explore how data science can be utilized to enhance diversity, equity and inclusion, said OBrien. Leveraging advances in big data and artificial intelligence holds the promise of complementing and accelerating a range of initiatives in this area.

Some of the topics the speakers and participants will address include how to identify a diversity-related goal, how to quantify and contextualize the challenge of increasing diversity, and analyzing approaches that have and have not worked.

Find out more and register for the symposium at https://icds.psu.edu/diversity.

Last Updated February 17, 2021

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How Intel Employees Volunteered Their Data Science Expertise To Help Costa Rica Save Lives During the Pandemic – CSRwire.com

Published 02-19-21

Submitted by Intel Corporation

We Are Intel

What do you do when a terrifying pandemic that has shaken the globe threatens to overwhelm your country? For Intel employees in Costa Rica, the answer was to offer their problem-solving expertiseand over 1,000 hours of highly technical workhelping the government develop an effective response plan.

In the early days of the pandemic, the uncertainty of how quickly the virus would spread and how severely it would impact communities made healthcare availability and resources a top concern. Feeling they could use their technical expertise to help, a group of Intel employees reached out to the Caja Costarricence de Seguro Social (CCSS), Costa Ricas main agency responsible for its public health sector.

Luis D. Rojas, one of the volunteer co-leads for the Intel team (seen here wearing a plaid shirt), laid the groundwork with CCSS to understand where help was needed, and with that, the team quickly began iterating on a statistical model to project anticipated demand for hospital beds and ICU capacity. With their combined expertise in data science, statistical process control, and machine learning system deployment, the team was able to pool their areas of knowledge to present their model and recommendations to the CCSS agency, and even the President. Ultimately, their project became one of the key modeling systems used by the government to inform their pandemic response.

Luis, and the rest of the Costa Rica team provided whats called skills-based volunteering, in which volunteers leverage the skills they possess the most expertise in to help address community concerns challenges.

What motivated me to help was my parents, said Jonathan Sequeira Androvetto, data scientist and volunteer co-lead. Both of my parents are in the high-risk population, and knowing that what I was doing was helping my country and my family was incredible. Volunteering in this way gave me a lot of positive energy it was recharging.

Jonathan and the other volunteers used their expertise in data science and statistics to help the government understand how their containment policies would affect virus reproduction rates and potential hospital and ICU utilization. The team also developed a dashboard intended to be shared with local governments to summarize the state of their cities in terms of how the pandemic is behaving. The dashboard includes metrics such as the growth rates of certain reproduction rates (R) / active cases in respective cities, as well as a 21-day projection of new cases / active cases, if the R trend is sustained in the near future.

You get back more than you give, shared volunteer co-lead and machine learning engineer Jenny Peraza, on why she went above and beyond to apply her skillset to supporting the governments pandemic response. When I began this project, it was from a place of intellectual curiosity. It evolved into so much more, and its been incredibly gratifying to be able to put my process excellence and statistical knowledge towards successfully containing and managing this problem.

The Costa Rica team proved that a coordinated volunteer effort, especially one that maximizes specific skills, can make an increased impact on local and national communities. From a small idea to a national effort, the team was able to come together to help a community much larger than themselves.

When the pandemic is over, both Jenny and Jonathan have plans to continue their skills-based volunteering. Jonathan shared, Giving back to my country in this way has been phenomenal, and the positive energy and relationships Ive made through the course of this project both within and outside of Intel have meant so much. Added Jenny, There are a wealth of resources and opportunities out there, sometimes its just a matter of finding the right fit for you to apply your knowledge and skills to help make your community stronger.

At Intel, corporate responsibility means doing what is right. Respecting people and the world around us. Its how we do business.

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How Intel Employees Volunteered Their Data Science Expertise To Help Costa Rica Save Lives During the Pandemic - CSRwire.com

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