About

About

Avicenna Research enables people to convert their smartphone into a micro research lab, so they can join scientists in finding life-changing discoveries.

Smartphones and wearables are powerful tools which have revolutionized our way of life. Beyond the untethered connectivity and casual games, smartphones allow us to objectively measure our behavior through apps such as exercise monitoring tools or food journals. While such information is can help guide us towards positive change, it can also be very valuable to scientists helping them accomplish ground-breaking discoveries. Information from smartphones can help researchers to better understand humans, and they can use this understanding for battle diseases such as the Zika virus or Ebola, to control smoking behavior in teenagers, or to design better public transit services.

Avicenna Research is the first platform that turns smartphones into micro research labs. It allows the use of almost all smartphone functionalities in research studies, from passive sensor monitoring to controlled tasks, and context-dependent surveys. Researchers can use Avicenna Research to perform their observations more accurately and at larger scale, while putting less burden on participants. The ability to perform eligibility screening, informed consent, and enrolment all through the phone without requiring a physical meeting with participants means anyone from anywhere in the world can join the study, as long as they have a smartphone. This means more participants, and more meaningful data.

Most importantly, there is no programming expertise needed to use Avicenna Research. The ability of Avicenna Research app to adapt itself to any study design means anyone with any level of expertise in computer science can start using Avicenna Research in minutes.

Our Story

Avicenna Research emerged from a research project at the University of Saskatchewan named iEpi. iEpi was originally designed to use sensors for tracking the spread of the H1N1 virus in central Canada during the winter of 2009. After the initial project, iEpi’s success motivated us to continue investigation. Collaborators became interested in using iEpi in areas as diverse as computer game design, measuring intervention effectiveness related to social health determinants, computational social science, automated tracking of infection spread during epidemics.

Our experience with the diverse applications of iEpi and seeing how it can benefit and accelerate research in different areas motivated us to make it available to other researchers as well. Avicenna Research has enhanced iEpi creating a fully automated research system useable by anyone, anywhere in the world. Avicenna Research has been successfully deployed in projects in North America, Europe, and Australia.

Research behind Avicenna

Flunet: Automated tracking of contacts during flu season

Author: 

MS Hashemian, KG Stanley, ND Osgood


Published in the Proceedings of the 8th International Symposium on Modeling and Optimization in Mobile, Ad Hoc and Wireless Networks (WiOpt) - 2010

iEpi: an end to end solution for collecting, conditioning and utilizing epidemiologically relevant data

Author: 

MS Hashemian, DL Knowles, J Calver, W Qian, MC Bullock, S Bell, RL Mandryk, ND Osgood, KG Stanley


Published in the Proceedings of the 2nd ACM international workshop on Pervasive Wireless Healthcare - 2012

Human network data collection in the wild: the epidemiological utility of micro-contact and location data

Author: 

MS Hashemian, KG Stanley, DL Knowles, J Calver, ND Osgood


Published in the Proceedings of the 2nd ACM SIGHIT International Health Informatics Symposium - 2012

Leveraging H1N1 infection transmission modeling with proximity sensor microdata

Author: 

MS Hashemian, KG Stanley, ND Osgood


Published in the BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making - 2012

Temporal aggregation impacts on epidemiological simulations employing microcontact data

Author: 

MS Hashemian, W Qian, KG Stanley, ND Osgood


Published in the BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making - 2012

Human dynamic networks in opportunistic routing and epidemiology

Author: 

MS Hashemian


Published in the Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collections, University of Saskatchewan - 2012

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