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IIASA corner
IIASA postdoc Sibel Eker uses
systems modeling to influence
policymaking.
Eker joined IIASA in July 2017
as a postdoc in the Advanced
Systems Analysis (ASA), Ecosystems
Services and Management, and
Water programs. Originally
from Turkey, Eker studied in the Netherlands, worked in London,
and has a background in industrial
and systems engineering.
“Policy impact and innovation are
my primary focus areas,” says Eker.
“I hope to design and communicate
my work to directly address the
policy problems of the time, and
to use my interdisciplinary
background to create synergies
and innovation in modeling.”
The ASA Program aims to
develop new, interdisciplinary
methods to address problems in the policy analysis of complex,
socioenvironmental systems. This
suits Eker perfectly, as her primary
interests center on developing
modeling and simulation tools to
help deal with these highly
complex issues.
Systems models in particular
not only acknowledge the
uncertainty and complexity of these
problems, but help researchers
explore a wide variety of different
outcomes. By predicting and
analyzing these different scenarios,
researchers will be able to produce
data that enables policymakers
to adopt proactive strategies
for solving some of the world’s
most daunting problems.
“I hope that my work here will
make models more useful, either
by shedding some light on the
validity concerns and perspectives
at the science-policy interface, or by
bringing an explicit human behavior
component to the models of global
environmental change,” says Eker.
Helping to solve
the world’s most
complex problems
Software engineer Anto Subash
builds new applications to
collect and visualize data.
Subash joined IIASA in January 2017
as an application developer in the
Earth Observation Systems Group,
which forms part of the Ecosystems
Services and Management Program.
He was born in Nagercoil, India,
and grew up in Chennai, on the
country’s southeastern coast.
Subash, whose background is
in computer science and software
engineering, is a full-stack software
developer, meaning that he creates
both web and mobile applications.
His work largely focuses on creating
a framework for improving the
process of crowdsourcing data, as
well as making it more user-friendly.
Subash is currently working
on web mapping and application development for new data
collection methods. He is involved
in two major projects: BirdLife
and FloodCitiSense. BirdLife is an
application that allows users to
report threats to bird populations
in a given area. He originally built
the application for users in Spain,
but is expanding it to users in
Indonesia, Greece, and Georgia.
Similarly, FloodCitiSense enables
users to report flood events in
some of Europe’s low-lying areas, including Birmingham,
Brussels, and Rotterdam.
“The applications I help create
are used to collect, display, and
visualize data,” explains Subash.
“By making them easier to use for
the people submitting data, we
hope to encourage more people
to use them. On the visualization
side, we hope to enable scientists
to understand and communicate
this data in more impactful ways.”
Written by:
Jeremy Summers
Employing
crowdsourcing for
better data collection
People profiles
Sibel Eker: eker@iiasa.ac.at
Anto Subash: anto@iiasa.ac.at
www.iiasa.ac.at30
Options Summer 2019
zurĂĽck zum
Buch options, Band summer 2019"
options
Band summer 2019
- Titel
- options
- Band
- summer 2019
- Ort
- Laxenburg
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 32
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine