I don't know when this trent will be  popular in our country.  But as is put it 
in the article, it may be a beginning.

Renuka.



Date:13/11/2008 URL: 
http://www.thehindu.com/2008/11/13/stories/2008111361672600.htm 

Front Page 

Web searches to help track disease patterns 

Miguel Helft 

Looks like an early-warning system for outbreaks is here 

SAN FRANCISCO: There is a new common symptom of the flu, in addition to the 
usual aches, coughs, fevers and sore throats. It turns out that a lot of ailing
people enter phrases like "flu symptoms" into Google and other search engines 
before they call their doctors. 

That simple act, multiplied across millions of keyboards in homes around the 
country, has given rise to a new early-warning system for fast-spreading flu
outbreaks, called Google Flu Trends. 

Tests of the new Web tool from Google.org, the company's philanthropic unit, 
suggest that it may be able to detect regional outbreaks of the flu a week
to 10 days before they are reported by the U.S. Centres for Disease Control and 
Prevention. 

In February, for example, the CDC reported that flu cases had spiked in the 
mid-Atlantic States. But Google says its search data showed a spike in queries
about flu symptoms two weeks before that report was released. 

New service 

Its new service at google.org/flutrends analyses those searches as they come 
in, creating graphs and maps of the country that, ideally, will show where
the flu is spreading. 

The CDC reports are slower because they rely on data collected and compiled 
from thousands of health care providers, laboratories and other sources. Some
public health experts say the Google data could help accelerate the response of 
doctors, hospitals and public health officials to a nasty flu season, reducing
the spread of the disease and, potentially, saving lives. 

"The earlier the warning, the earlier prevention and control measures can be 
put in place, and this could prevent cases of influenza," said Dr. Lyn Finelli,
lead for surveillance at the influenza division of the CDC Between 5 and 20 per 
cent of the U.S. population contracts the flu each year, she said, leading
to 36,000 deaths on average. 

Worldwide 

For now, the service covers only the U.S., but Google is hoping to eventually 
use the same technique to help track influenza and other diseases worldwide.
"From a technological perspective, it is the beginning," said Eric E. Schmidt, 
Google's chief executive. 

The premise behind Google Flu Trends - what appears to be a fruitful marriage 
of mob behaviour and medicine - has been validated by an unrelated study 
indicating
that the data collected by Yahoo, Google's main rival in Internet search, can 
also help with early detection of the flu. 

"In theory, we could use this stream of information to learn about other 
disease trends as well," said Dr. Philip M. Polgreen, Assistant Professor of 
medicine
and epidemiology at the University of Iowa and an author of the study based on 
Yahoo's data. 

Still, some public health officials say many health departments already use 
other approaches, like gathering data from visits to emergency rooms to keep
tabs on disease trends in their communities. 

"We don't have any evidence that this is more timely than our emergency room 
data," said Farzad Mostashari, Assistant Commissioner, Department of Health
and Mental Hygiene in New York City. 

If Google provided health officials with details of the system's workings so 
that it could be validated scientifically, the data could serve as an 
additional,
free way to detect influenza, said Dr. Mostashari, who is also chairman of the 
International Society for Disease Surveillance. 

A paper on the methodology of Flu Trends is expected to be published in Nature. 

"Collective intelligence" 

Researchers have long said that the material published on the Web amounts to a 
form of "collective intelligence" that can be used to spot trends and make
predictions. But the data collected by search engines is particularly powerful, 
because the keywords and phrases that people type into them represent their
most immediate intentions. People may search for "Kauai hotel" when they are 
planning a vacation and for "foreclosure" when they have trouble with their
mortgage. Those queries express the world's collective desires and needs, its 
wants and likes. 

Internal research at Yahoo suggests that increases in searches for certain 
terms can help forecast what technology products will be hits, for instance.
Yahoo has begun using search traffic to help it decide what material to feature 
on its site. 

Two years ago, Google began opening its search data trove through Google 
Trends, a tool that allows anyone to track the relative popularity of search 
terms.


Sophisticated tools 

Google also offers more sophisticated search traffic tools that marketers can 
use to fine-tune ad campaigns. And internally, the company has tested the
use of search data to reach conclusions about economic, marketing and 
entertainment trends. 

"Most forecasting is basically trend extrapolation," said Hal Varian, Google's 
chief economist. "This works remarkably well, but tends to miss turning points,
times when the data changes direction. Our hope is that Google data might help 
with this problem." 

Prabhakar Raghavan, who is in charge of Yahoo Labs and the company's search 
strategy, also said search data could be valuable for forecasters and 
scientists,
but privacy concerns had generally stopped it from sharing it with outside 
academics. 

Keywords for search 

Google Flu Trends avoids privacy pitfalls by relying only on aggregated data 
that cannot be traced to individual searchers. To develop the service, Google's
engineers devised a basket of keywords and phrases related to the flu, 
including thermometer, flu symptoms, muscle aches, chest congestion and others.


Google dug into its database, extracted five years of data on those queries and 
mapped them onto the CDC's reports of influenza-like illness. 

It found a strong correlation between the data and the reports from the agency, 
which advised it on the development of the new service. 

"We know it matches very, very well in the way flu developed in the last year," 
said Larry Brilliant, executive director of Google.org. Dr. Finelli of the
CDC and Dr. Brilliant both cautioned that the data needed to be monitored to 
ensure that the correlation with flu activity remained valid. - New York Times
News Service 
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