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5 cybersecurity best practices for businesses to support their workforces – Review – Review

It has been almost two years since the Covid-19 pandemic began, with the first lockdown in March 2020 forcing businesses to adopt a remote working approach. Now that South Africa is opening up, a hybrid model is quickly becoming the norm, with employees splitting their time between the office and their home.

As a result, the IT departments role has become more complicated than ever, owing to the rapid increase in remotely connected devices. Cyberattacks have, in turn, become more common.

The most high-profile cyberattack happened in July, when Transnet, the state-owned railway company, was forced to shut down for a week. This attack, however, was only one of many, as global statistics show that a cyberattack takes place every 11 seconds.

This article looks at five factors that businesses can implement to secure their workforce:

When establishing policies and standards, companies must consider their cloud platforms, software development lifecycles, DevOps procedures and technologies, and compliance with regional regulations. Basic security hygiene alone is not sufficient at enterprise level to protect against advanced cyberattacks.

When putting together policies, businesses should keep in mind the following:

It is importantto educate all employees on the evolving threatlandscape. Businesses should educateall stakeholders about the many types of dangers from phishing to ransomware to social engineering. Are your staff aware of these threats, the damaging results of such an attack, andtrained to know what to do andwhom to call in the event of an attack?

Businesses should provide basic security tools to their employees, such as password managers, multi-factor authentication, data backup, and behaviour threat analytics. Threat analytics, especially, can help warn users and administrators when an account is accessed from an unknown IP during odd hours.

Perhaps consider incentivising employees with a rewards programme. For instance, internal cybersecurity and bug bounty initiatives at Zoho have aided immensely in educating and rewarding responsible staff.

Identity and key protection should be a primary priority for every cybersecurity team.Its critical to securelyauthenticate and authorise individuals, services, devices, and apps toensure that only valid accounts/devices are able toaccess the companys data. For example, many businesses now use SSH keys and SSL certificates in the background to perform safe cryptographicoperations.

When it comes to identity management, the beginning point is to implement tactics such as strong passwords, passwordless authentication, multi-factor authentication, role-based access, identity-based perimeters, and zero-trust access control strategies.

Once an identity has been granted access, a user can gain access to numerous endpoints and applications owned by the company using the identity. In a hybrid environment, enterprise data is communicated over smartphones, IoT devices, BYOD, cloud servers, and more,and many companies still rely on traditional firewalls and VPNs to restrict access.

Rather than relying on these legacy models, companies should adopt a least-privilege access strategy for users, applications, systems, and connected devices. Its important to provide only a minimum level of access based on job roles and responsibilities. This technique has the following important benefits:

Unpatched systems and apps are some of the easiest targets for hackers. Whenever a new security patch is issued, attackers will attempt to exploit the flaw before the patch is applied in order to obtain access to corporate data.Thus, enterprises should take advantage of patch management and vulnerability management tools thatoffer immediate implementation. Other benefits include improved efficiency and simplified compliance, helping avoid unwarranted fines.

Businesses in South Africa are currently more interconnected than they have ever been. While this is a development that will help many industries thrive, it also implies that businesses must prioritise cybersecurityto ensure successful benefits realisation. The truth is that its a matter of when, not if, your company will be targeted, and being preparedwith a robust cybersecurity and resilience strategyis the greatestdefence.

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St. Cloud Schools Looking to Solve Worker Shortage – WJON News

St. Cloud School District 742 is still experiencing a bus driver and substitute teacher shortage. That according to Superintendent Willie Jett. He says the Human Resources office is very busy looking for many open positions that aren't exclusive to the before mentioned positions. Jett says they are seeing people in the community stepping up, coming to them saying they are getting training and/or volunteering their services. He says they are working "tirelessly to fill the shortages". Jett says this challenge of a worker shortage isn't unique to them...they are seeing this happen throughout the nation in education.

Jett says their students and staff are doing a great job with handling the necessary requirements to accommodate COVID-19. He says both students and staff have adjusted well to mask wearing and social distancing when they can. Jett is pleased they've been able to offer in-person learning 5 days a week every week since the school year began. He is students and staff are also staying home when they aren't feeling well and that is very important.

Jett says this past month their Regional Center of Excellence in Education recognized 20 of the District 742 licensed staff members for their accomplishments as outstanding education leaders. They are recognized as positive role models for students and staff. This is called a LEO award.

My conversation with Willie Jett is available below.

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The New Agility and Resiliency Model Businesses Need to Survive – CEOWORLD magazine

Organizations operating today balance flexibility and time-to-market. Theyre managing cyberattacks, COVID-19 shutdowns, and other threats to a businesss ability to function. Managing these issues and moving forward in a digital world requires a responsive and iterative infrastructure.

Businesses require hybrid work models offering the flexibility of home or the office. Making this happen seamlessly requires the right technology and resources in place to enable people to do their jobs regardless of their location or access device. Theres a need for a new model for business infrastructure, where digital tools, security tech, and connectivity all come together. Realizing this new modern infrastructure involves a host of strategies, including a more secure virtual desktop, hybrid clouds, and more available business applications.

Leverage Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI)

To manage security concerns for remote workers, many firms offer virtual desktop infrastructure, or VDI. With VDI, companies can offer virtual desktop PC environments. These are hosted on a server, and users can then access virtual desktop images that are running a central server. All the virtual machines are host based and managed through a virtual machine monitor which establish and run the various VMs running on the VDI.

Its an efficient way to give organizations the workforce flexibility they and their workers need along with enhanced security. VDI centralizes the infrastructure, so information is never flowing outside of the data center where it stays under strict monitoring. If the device is compromised, the data is not at risk. It eliminates a core concern about virtual desktop usage, where employees open them on unsecured devices that arent under corporate control.

For firms handling large remote workforces, VDIs are purpose built for scale. It reduces capital costs because theres less hardware required, and the company does not need to provide laptops for the employees home usage. Theres also inexpensive deployment for firms that have server architectures in place, and theres long-term cost benefits for firms that need a bigger initial investment.

VDI simplifies remote working, by allowing access through any device and location for maximum flexibility for todays global teams. This boosts productivity and VDIs reliability removes downtime issues, so workers can gain access with confidence. The centralized control means IT and management can provide seasonal workers, consultants, and other vendors with access without exposing the companys data.

Use Containers for Applications

Remote workers utilize network resources throughout the day and night. With global teams and flexible hours, some staff need application access at midnight on a Saturday. Supporting this requires firms to transform their legacy applications so they function with a remote mobile device-based workforce. Pick some of the companys applications accessed through mobile and introduce a container architecture, where code and dependencies come together, so IT can shift an application to a different server without needing any adjustments. This removes downtime caused by server maintenance because the application moves to another server, so theres little to no downtime and reduced infrastructure costs.

These containerized applications also offer enhanced security, since theyre running as their own processes, independent of others. With this structure, a threat would not reach the centralized host system, giving IT more time and opportunity to remedy the situation. It improves application availability to enable productivity and reduces the costs of a potential breach.

Bring in a Qualified Vendor for Hybrid Clouds Capabilities

Developing a hybrid cloud strategy is an ideal way to add agility to an organization. It provides flexibility and security for remote workforces. Firms using this model can support both distributed and remote employees with instant data access that is not coming through a single central location. The firm can shift sensitive data to on-premises secure servers as it moves apps and various employee and partner-focused services to a public cloud. IT and senior leadership leveraging hybrid clouds also hedge against spikes in demand because they can simply pay for more cloud resources, instead of worrying about massive capital costs with growing their infrastructure.

Consider shifting applications to public clouds within a hybrid model to reduce latency. If some of the remote workforce lives within a narrow area, then pick cloud services close by for the optimal performance. Encourage IT to look at the most often used applications and those that receive more complaints and a poor user experience due to connectivity issues. Another tactic is using edge caching to reduce latency. Talk to IT about caching some content on your internal servers, such as static information like profile data or product documentation.

Leveraging a third-party firm for hybrid cloud implementation gives companies a guided hand and outside perspective. The best partners will utilize a DevOps-down approach that includes discussions with the development and application departments. Theyll propose cloud strategies that align with the clients change management initiatives, operations, complementary technology choices, and conceptual architecture. Its part of a new way of looking at business infrastructure that optimizes security, connectivity, and growth.

Written by Michael Norring.

Track Latest News Live on CEOWORLD magazine and get news updates from the United States and around the world. The views expressed are those of the author and are not necessarily those of the CEOWORLD magazine. Follow CEOWORLD magazine on Twitter andFacebook. For media queries, please contact: info@ceoworld.biz

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Function-as-a-Service Poised for Rapid Growth – RTInsights

FaaS provides businesses without massive IT teams the opportunity to build and deploy the applications they need without having to support servers.

Function-as-a-Service (FaaS) allows users to forgo servers while developing applications. It has use cases in the microservices world, especiallyIT automation, chatbots, data processors, and the like. It relieves headaches with server maintenance, allowing companies to focus more on app-specific code and support companies who dont have in-house teams capable of maintaining servers.

As such, the adoption of Function-as-a-Service is on the rise. A recent report by Reports and Data expects the FaaS market to make huge gains in the next few years. FaaS had a 2018 market size of $3.33 billion, but companies needing management capabilities for multiple platforms have driven the market share up. It is expected to have a worth of 31.53 billion by 2026, which represents a CAGR of 32.3%.

It has use cases in the microservices world, especiallyIT automation, chatbots, data processors, and the like. It relieves headaches with server maintenance, allowing companies to focus more on app-specific code and support companies who dont have in-house teams capable of maintaining servers.

Serverless mobile apps offer the same capabilities. Theyre cheaper and faster to deploy and reduce barriers to development. FaaS will take advantage of cloud adoption and provide more flexibility for business.

FaaS allows customers to budget only for the functions they need without wasted resources. Its a viable solution for teams looking to streamline operations and take on a more composable architecture.

According to the report, North American FaaS companies dominated the market, but this wont hamper development. It has a high penetration rate in a number of industry verticals. As businesses seek to reduce latency and jump into digital transformation, the cost-effective and disruption-proof solutions for their operations needs, FaaS could offer just the capability they need.

FaaS is part of a suite of smart services gaining traction. These focus on reducing the cumbersome nature of traditional operations and deployment and lean up business areas such as decision making or development. FaaS provides businesses without massive IT teams the opportunity to build and deploy the applications they need while supporting the infrastructure side. The report highlights the potential for FaaS to be status quo in the near future.

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NIH awards nearly $75M to catalyze data science research in Africa – National Institutes of Health

News Release

Tuesday, October 26, 2021

New program will establish data science research and training network across the continent.

The National Institutes of Health is investing about $74.5 million over five years to advance data science, catalyze innovation and spur health discoveries across Africa. Under its new Harnessing Data Science for Health Discovery and Innovation in Africa (DS-I Africa) program, the NIH is issuing 19 awards to support research and training activities. DS-I Africa is an NIH Common Fund program that is supported by the Office of the Director and 11 NIH Institutes, Centers and Offices.

Awards will establish a consortium consisting of a data science platform and coordinating center, seven research hubs, seven data science research training programs and four projects focused on studying the ethical, legal and social implications of data science research. Awardees have a robust network of partnerships across the African continent and in the United States, including numerous national health ministries, nongovernmental organizations, corporations, and other academic institutions.

This initiative has generated tremendous enthusiasm in all sectors of Africas biomedical research community, said NIH Director Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D. Big data and artificial intelligence have the potential to transform the conduct of research across the continent, while investing in research training will help to support Africas future data science leaders and ensure sustainable progress in this promising field.

The University of Cape Town (UCT) will develop and manage the initiatives open data science platform and coordinating center, building on previous NIH investments in UCTs data and informatics capabilities made through the Human Heredity and Health in Africa (H3Africa) program. UCT will provide a flexible, scalable platform for the DS-I Africa researchers, so they can find and access data, select tools and workflows, and run analyses through collaborative workspaces. UCT will also administer and support core resources, as well as coordinate consortium activities.

The research hubs, all of which are led by African institutions, will apply novel approaches to data analysis and AI to address critical health issues including:

The research training programs, which leverage partnerships with U.S. institutions, will create multi-tiered curricula to build skills in foundational health data science, with options ranging from masters and doctoral degree tracks, to postdoctoral training and faculty development. A mix of in-person and remote training will be offered to build skills in multi-disciplinary topics such as applied mathematics, biostatistics, epidemiology, clinical informatics, analytics, computational omics, biomedical imaging, machine intelligence, computational paradigms, computer science and engineering. Trainees will receive intensive mentoring and participate in practical internships to learn how to apply data science concepts to medical and public health areas including the social determinants of health, climate change, food systems, infectious diseases, noncommunicable diseases, health surveillance, injuries, pediatrics and parasitology.

Recognizing that data science research may uncover potential ethical, legal and social implications (ELSI), the consortium will include dedicated ELSI research addressing these topics. This will include efforts to develop evidence-based, context specific guidance for the conduct and governance of data science initiatives; evaluate current legal instruments and guidelines to develop new and innovative governance frameworks to support data science health research in Africa; explore legal differences across regions of the continent in the use of data science for health discovery and innovation; and investigate public perceptions and attitudes regarding the use of data science approaches for healthcare along with the roles and responsibilities of different stakeholder groups regarding intellectual property, patents, and commercial use of genomics data in health. In addition, the ELSI research teams will be embedded in the research hubs to provide important and timely guidance.

A second phase of the program is being planned to encourage more researchers to join the consortium, foster the formation of new partnerships and address additional capacity building needs. Through the combined efforts of all its initiatives, DS-I Africa is intended to use data science to develop solutions to the continents most pressing public health problems through a robust ecosystem of new partners from academic, government and private sectors.

In addition to the Common Fund (CF), the DS-I Africa awards are being supported by the Fogarty International Center (FIC), the National Cancer Institute (NCI), the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI), the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (NIBIB), the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD), the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR), the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), the National Library of Medicine (NLM) and the NIH Office of Data Science Strategy (ODSS). The initiative is being led by the CF, FIC, NIBIB, NIMH and NLM.

More information is available at https://commonfund.nih.gov/AfricaData.

Photos depicting data science activities at awardee institutions are available for downloading at https://commonfund.nih.gov/africadata/images.

About the NIH Common Fund: The NIH Common Fund encourages collaboration and supports a series of exceptionally high-impact, trans-NIH programs. Common Fund programs are managed by the Office of Strategic Coordination in the Division of Program Coordination, Planning, and Strategic Initiatives in the NIH Office of the Director in partnership with the NIH Institutes, Centers, and Offices. More information is available at the Common Fund website:https://commonfund.nih.gov.

About the National Institutes of Health (NIH):NIH, the nation's medical research agency, includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NIH is the primary federal agency conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and is investigating the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit http://www.nih.gov.

NIHTurning Discovery Into Health

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Worldwide Data Science Platform Industry to 2027 – Increasing Adoption of Data-Driven Technologies by Enterprises Presents Opportunities – PRNewswire

DUBLIN, Oct. 26, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- The "Global Data Science Platform Market (2021-2027) by Component, Deployment, Organization Size, Function, Industry Vertical, and Geography, Competitive Analysis, Impact of Covid-19, Ansoff Analysis" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering. The Global Data Science Platform Market is estimated to be USD 43.3 Bn in 2021 and is expected to reach USD 81.43 Bn by 2027, growing at a CAGR of 11.1%.

Key factors such as a massive increase in data volume due to increasing digitalization and automation of processes have been a crucial driver in the growth of data science platform. Besides, the enterprises are increasingly focusing on analytical tools for deriving insights into consumer behavior and purchasing patterns. This, in turn, has been shaping their business decisions and strategies to compete in the market. Besides, the adoption of data science platforms has found its way in various industry verticals such as manufacturing, IT, BFSI, retail, etc. All these factors have helped in contributing to the growth of the data science platform market.

However, the costs attached to the deployment of these platforms, along with less workforce with domain expertise capabilities and threats to data privacy, has been a hindrance in the growth of the market.

Market Dynamics

Drivers

Restraints

Opportunities

Challenges

Company Profiles

Some of the companies covered in this report are Microsoft Corporation, IBM Corporation, SAS Institute, Inc., SAP SE, RapidMiner, Inc., Dataiku SAS, Alteryx, Inc., Fair Issac Corporation, MathWorks, Inc., Teradata, Inc, etc.

Competitive Quadrant

The report includes Competitive Quadrant, a proprietary tool to analyze and evaluate the position of companies based on their Industry Position score and Market Performance score. The tool uses various factors for categorizing the players into four categories. Some of these factors considered for analysis are financial performance over the last 3 years, growth strategies, innovation score, new product launches, investments, growth in market share, etc.

Why buy this report?

Report Highlights:

Key Topics Covered:

1 Report Description

2 Research Methodology

3 Executive Summary

4 Market Overview4.1 Introduction 4.2 Market Dynamics4.2.1 Drivers4.2.2 Restraints4.2.3 Opportunities4.2.4 Challenges4.3 Trends

5 Market Analysis5.1 Porter's Five Forces Analysis5.2 Impact of COVID-195.3 Ansoff Matrix Analysis

6 Global Data Science Platform Market, By Component6.1 Introduction6.2 Platform6.3 Services6.3.1 Managed Services6.3.2 Professional Services6.3.2.1 Training and Consulting6.3.2.2 Integration and Deployment6.3.2.3 Support and Maintenance

7 Global Data Science Platform Market, By Deployment7.1 Introduction7.2 Cloud7.3 On-premises

8 Global Data Science Platform Market, By Organization Size8.1 Introduction8.2 Large Enterprises8.3 Small and Medium-sized Enterprises

9 Global Data Science Platform Market, By Function9.1 Introduction9.2 Marketing9.3 Sales9.4 Logistics9.5 Finance and Accounting9.6 Customer Support9.7 Others

10 Global Data Science Platform Market, By Industry Verticals10.1 Introduction10.2 Banking, Financial Services, and Insurance (BFSI)10.3 Telecom and IT10.4 Retail and E-Commerce10.5 Healthcare and Life sciences10.6 Manufacturing10.7 Energy and Utilities10.8 Media and Entertainment10.9 Transportation and Logistics10.10 Government10.11 Others

11 Global Data Science Platform Market, By Geography

12 Competitive Landscape12.1 Competitive Quadrant12.2 Market Share Analysis12.3 Competitive Scenario12.3.1 Mergers & Acquisitions12.3.2 Agreements, Collaborations, & Partnerships12.3.3 New Product Launches & Enhancements12.3.4 Investments & Fundings

13 Company Profiles13.1 Microsoft Corporation13.2 IBM Corporation 13.3 Google, Inc13.4 Wolfram13.5 DataRobot Inc.13.6 Sense Inc.13.7 RapidMiner Inc. 13.8 Domino Data Lab13.9 Dataiku SAS13.10 Alteryx, Inc.13.11 Oracle13.12 Tibco Software Inc.13.13 SAS Institute Inc.13.14 SAP SE13.15 The Mathworks, Inc.13.16 Cloudera, Inc.13.17 H2O.ai13.18 Fair Issac Corporation13.19 Teradata, Inc13.20 Kaggle Inc., 13.21 Micropole S.A. 13.22 Continuum Analytics, Inc.13.23 C&F Insight technology solutions13.24 Civis Analytics, Inc.13.25 VMware Inc13.26 Alpine Data Labs,13.27 Thoughtworks Inc13.28 MuSigma13.29 Tableau Software LLC

14 Appendix

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/do5ov7

Media Contact: Research and Markets Laura Wood, Senior Manager [emailprotected]

For E.S.T Office Hours Call +1-917-300-0470 For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call +1-800-526-8630 For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900

U.S. Fax: 646-607-1904 Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716

SOURCE Research and Markets

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Takeda’s Krista McKee on Shifting the Data Ecosystem – Bio-IT World

October 26, 2021 | TRENDS FROM THE TRENCHESKrista McKees 20-year career in pharmaspanning Genzyme, smaller biotechs, Novartis vaccine development, and the last 7 years at Takedahas steadily taken her on a trajectory toward data science. She is currently Head of Insights and Analytics at Takedas Data Sciences Institute (DSI).

McKee recently sat down with Stan Gloss, founding partner at BioTeam, to discuss how Takeda is recognizing the importance of data alignment and accessibility and the choreography necessary to keep it all moving forward. Bio-IT World was invited to listen in.

Editors Note: Trends from the Trenches is a regular column from BioTeam, offering a peek into some of their most interesting case studies. A life science IT consulting firm at the intersection of science, data and technology, BioTeam builds innovative scientific data ecosystems that close the gap between what scientists want to do with dataand what they can do. Learn more at http://www.bioteam.net.

Stan Gloss: Can you tell me more about the Data Sciences Institute at Takeda?

Krista McKee: Absolutely. The Data Sciences Institute (DSI) is a collection of R&D functions that are focused on data. Some of those functions are the more known ones, like statistics, programming, and epidemiology. Others are less known and focused on things such as data architecture, data flows, digital endpoints and other applications of data and digital. Throughout these functions, we are working to apply data science principles to get medicines to patients faster.

What does your role look like in DSI and what sets it apart?

My group, called data architecture and digital solutions, falls into the lesser-known category. We are a group that enables R&D to interact with data in new ways. We do this by partnering across functions and into IT to deploy strategies around data architecture, data governance and access, data harmonization and enrichment, and data insights. When you think about that across R&D, the remit is quite broad. In the last five years, we've gone from showing what's possible through specific use cases, to now starting to lead in establishing a data ecosystem that is going to be scalable for R&D and get our data ready for AI. Were also working to enable an analyst and data science community throughout R&D who can readily access the right data.

Can you tell me more about the different data types and how DSI is prioritizing the exposure and organization of them?

When you think about R&D data, there's operations data, there's financial data, there's clinical trial data, there's research data, just to name a few. We have demonstrated that you get a lot of value if you can start to bring in and organize certain types of data for both learning and use in day-to-day decision making. And applying automation to make it easier to interact with data across the ecosystem is important.

How did your prior experience bring you into this role?

From biotech R&D, the vaccine development machine at Novartis, a leadership role in Takedas oncology therapeutic area unit and especially seeing the accountability necessary in the clinical trial delivery world, I learned about the trade-offs and interdependencies of data management. And despite how complex and hard all this is, it could be much easier if we take better care of our data as an asset and manage it accordingly.

Once the DSI was created within Takeda, I quickly found myself just gravitating toward it and finally partnered with my current boss on a project called Platypus, a Bio-IT World award winner in 2018, where we effectively knocked down silos around the clinical data with the right controls and governance to give the right people modern access to do what Takeda needed to do from an oversight perspective in our trials.

We love knocking down silos. Did that project create momentum?

That success led to another project where we automated the aggregation of data within programs for more proactive safety signal management. This project is one I am most proud of because of its direct benefit to patients. It also led to a project where we're bringing the clinical data that we've harmonized on the cloud together with organized pre-clinical data to enable reverse translational insights. Weve also supported efforts on operational data to give insights much more quickly and broadly than before.

Can you talk about the culture around this transformation?

At a large organization like Takeda, the old way was always hard; people owned data and thought of that data only in the context of their own use. The owners of a certain type of data never really appreciated that other people also needed these same data to effectively do their jobs.

Through our work, we are consistently showing people that we can use modern technology to organize and expose datawith the right controls of course. Sitting as a business function close to the core of R&D, we understand governance is a big part of what we do and were working to deploy an efficient governance less focused on "Why do you need it?" and more on "Why can't you have it? That's been a huge challenge all along, but it's something we've created a framework around and are continuing to refine.

Aligned with this, we are starting to communicate three levels of data. Level one is raw or novel data. We need to make sure we have all this data coming into our cloud-based ecosystem. Level two, or aligned data, is the data we harmonize or enrich and organize into accessible data models. And level three, consumed data, refers to democratized use of data to inform the many facets of R&D. Our overall objective is to appropriately and efficiently allow insights from anywhere across R&D. And our hope is that on Day 1 at Takeda, any R&D analyst or data scientist can have an appropriately comprehensive and transparent view of all three levels of data.

So, would I be correct to hear you say that the culture around this is really shifting?

Yes, we're starting to shift and show the value of that deeper organization.In most meetings I attend right now, I refer to the three levels of data, and people get it. They understand the value in taking the time to get data ready so that those insights can be achieved.

Is this value mostly understood in the context of ML/AI?

When we talk about AI/ML, there's a lot of potential value there, but most of it is still very unrealized in the R&D space. There is a need for iterating and a lot of potential vendors with which to partner. We need to have an ecosystem where the lift to engage someone with our data isn't going to be so big every time.

Additionally, the questions that certain data types can answer are much broader than the discipline in which the data types themselves sit. When you think about machine learning algorithms, you need a lot of data. So making sure data scientists working on operational prediction algorithms, for instance, have access to the many types of data that could meaningfully inform their algorithms is important.

Can you take me through a little of the journey that you took to transform just that little piece, moving away from my data and breaking down silos?

The brilliance of DSI at its inception was that we were a unique group in the organization that was bigger than any one particular functional allegiance. We were declared to serve Takeda R&D and were able to operate from the perspective that all data is Takedas data. And anyone within R&D could come to us and have a listening ear. If someone had a data need, they had a place to go and a group that was both incentivized and had the means to help them.

It's all about aligning people, technology, and processes. Other companies have data science centers of excellence and specific platforms, they talk about a data fabric. Does Takeda have a platform that all these data are fed into and everybody can access?

What we have centers around AWS, the data lake approach, and mechanisms to enable consumption of data of various types such as data marts or APIs. Until recently, my group has been more focused on directly delivering insights based off our cloud-based data layers. Now we are pivoting to focus more completely on maturing the data foundation and governance so that insights can come from anywhere.

Are there specific rules about which data are fed into this platform and how they are structured?

We are advanced in our culture and what we have in the cloud-based environment today. We have a mandate across R&D that says all R&D data goes into our cloud-based ecosystem and are deploying tools to expose what's there and the teams to appropriately govern what's there. We are also working to ensure that these data can be readily accessible in modern data exploration and data science platforms in which Takeda has invested.

The amount of investment in time for structuring and aligning data can't be underestimated. How much of your data would you characterize as FAIR compliant?

That's a good question. I dont know that I could give a number that I could hang my hat on. When we say all R&D data goes into this ecosystem, there's just so much. So much remains untapped even with the good progress we've made. As I've talked to my counterparts in various companies, one thing that is noteworthy for Takeda is that even as we're doing the heavy lifting to get that organization of the data, we're doing it in the context of delivering the value along the way. That said, we still have a ton of work to do.

What are the biggest challenges that you face now in continuing the evolution of your digital transformation?

The art of bringing together people, process, and technology in a meaningful and enduring way that continues to improve over time is a challenge. There's certainly a sprint aspect to it and a marathon aspect to it and finding that balance of getting the right initiatives defined with the right cross-functional attention and ownership that is enduring, it just takes a lot of effort.

Another challenge is in effectively deploying efforts across a large organization to get things moving. Many people's day-to-day jobs dont change, but functional experts need to find a space to be part of these initiatives and to really re-engineer how they are working every day. People are willing but there's a lot of choreographing, and I like to think of myself very much as a choreographer, bringing all these pieces together and having the early wins and the excitement maintained over time to get that long-term value for the organization.

Beautiful. What advice would you give organizations that are significantly behind you in terms of evolution?

What's been really critical and what I've valued a lot at Takeda has been the boldness of its leaders. In the beginning of my time at Takeda, that boldness was most noticeably a communicated one. Messages like, If you see a problem, feel empowered to find a way to fix it, resonated with me in my earlier days. Over time, the leadership messaging has been bolstered by bold actionwhich is critical to Takedas success. Data and digital imperatives are now commonplace at Takeda. Theres space for that innovation but also acceptance that it is an iterative process which will include failures from which we will need to pivot. There is also a culture that notices and rewards progress. There is something about people coming together to really drive forward innovation and progress that of all the places I have been, it's unique and it's why I love working for Takeda.

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Multi-institution project to train Kenyan experts to bring social determinants to bear on modeling health outcomes – Newswise

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Newswise BROOKLYN, New York, Tuesday, October 26, 2021 A data-science training program for equipping leaders to support the improvement of health outcomes in Kenya, led by a team from NYU, Brown University, and Moi University in Kenya, was chosen as one of 19 initiatives funded by The National Institutes of Health (NIH) under its new Harnessing Data Science for Health Discovery and Innovation in Africa (DS-I Africa) program.

The $1.7 million award, part of the NIHs mission to advance data science, catalyze innovation and spur health discoveries across Africa, establishes a consortium consisting of a data science platform and coordinating center, seven research hubs, seven data science research training programs, and four projects focused on studying the ethical, legal and social implications of data science research.

The main principal investigator for the NYU-Moi Data Science for Social Determinants Training Program (DSSD) is Rumi Chunara, associate professor of computer science and engineering and biostatistics at the NYU Tandon School of Engineering and NYU School of Global Public Health (NYU GPH). The DSSD training program represents a significant opportunity to leverage NYU's strengths in data science, machine learning and artificial intelligence in a collaborative fashion with global partners to improve data science capacity, specifically for health.

The goal of the project is to develop future leaders in data science who are equipped to gather and analyze data to better leverage deep and rich surveys, as well as internet and other digitized data sources that can help the collaborators capture information on the social determinants of health. The project, includes researchers at NYU Courant, NYU GPH, NYU Wagner, the Center for Urban Science and Progress (CUSP), the NYU Center for Data Science, and the NYU Grossman School of Medicine. It constitutes an extension into a real-world training program of Chunaras previous work on incorporating social determinants into predictive modeling for individual health outcomes.

To develop best practices in treatment and analytics for health outcomes, social determinants must be part of the data mix because they provide context on broader forces impinging on the health both of individuals and for communities. I want to thank the NIH for their acknowledgment of this." said Chunara. "Besides advancing local efforts in Kenya in data science and health, we also envision our program will augment global knowledge on data science practices.

DSSDs design will rapidly expand the local base of expertise via curriculum development, resulting in two Ph.D. (4-year training) and a total of six postdoctoral (2-year) and faculty (12-14 month) trainees, who will study at NYU. Additionally, eight masters and two Ph.D. trainees will commence or complete training (2-year and 4-year training, respectively) through newly developed data science tracks at Moi University.

Connecting with data science industries and organizations with a presence in Kenya, including IBM, Deep Learning Indaba, DataKind, AI.Kenya and Aga Khan University Nairobi and Karachi, will create intellectual meeting spaces for a variety of talented trainees from both data science and health backgrounds, to propel and sustainably advance the fields capacity in Kenyan institutions as well as the DS-I consortium.

About the New York University Tandon School of Engineering

The NYU Tandon School of Engineering dates to 1854, the founding date for both the New York University School of Civil Engineering and Architecture and the Brooklyn Collegiate and Polytechnic Institute. A January 2014 merger created a comprehensive school of education and research in engineering and applied sciences as part of a global university, with close connections to engineering programs at NYU Abu Dhabi and NYU Shanghai. NYU Tandon is rooted in a vibrant tradition of entrepreneurship, intellectual curiosity, and innovative solutions to humanitys most pressing global challenges. Research at Tandon focuses on vital intersections between communications/IT, cybersecurity, and data science/AI/robotics systems and tools and critical areas of society that they influence, including emerging media, health, sustainability, and urban living. We believe diversity is integral to excellence, and are creating a vibrant, inclusive, and equitable environment for all of our students, faculty and staff. For more information, visit engineering.nyu.edu.

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Stitch Fix CEO: ‘Data science and algorithms are at the core’ of the company – Oakland News Now

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StitchFix #datascience Yahoo Finances Sibile Marcellus spoke with Stitch Fix CEO Elizabeth Spaulding about how the company utilizes data science and

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Note from Zennie62Media and OaklandNewsNow.com : this video-blog post demonstrates the full and live operation of the latest updated version of an experimental Zennie62Media , Inc. mobile media video-blogging system network that was launched June 2018. This is a major part of Zennie62Media , Inc.s new and innovative approach to the production of news media. What we call The Third Wave of Media. The uploaded video is from a YouTube channel. When the YouTube video channel for Yahoo Finance uploads a video it is automatically uploaded to and formatted automatically at the Oakland News Now site and Zennie62-created and owned social media pages. The overall objective here, on top of our is smartphone-enabled, real-time, on the scene reporting of news, interviews, observations, and happenings anywhere in the World and within seconds and not hours is the use of the existing YouTube social graph on any subject in the World. Now, news is reported with a smartphone and also by promoting current content on YouTube: no heavy and expensive cameras or even a laptop are necessary, or having a camera crew to shoot what is already on YouTube. The secondary objective is faster, and very inexpensive media content news production and distribution. We have found there is a disconnect between post length and time to product and revenue generated. With this, the problem is far less, though by no means solved. Zennie62Media is constantly working to improve the system network coding and seeks interested content and media technology partners.

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Stitch Fix CEO: 'Data science and algorithms are at the core' of the company - Oakland News Now

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Miami Dade College to Host 10th Anniversary School of Science White Coat Ceremony and STEM Research Symposium – The Reporter

Miami, Oct. 26, 2021 The School of Science at Miami Dade College (MDC) will host the 10th anniversary White Coat Ceremony at 6 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 28. and the STEM Research Symposium on Saturday, Oct. 30, at 9 a.m. at the North Campus. Both events will focus on the training and recognition of up-and-coming researchers in the fields of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM).

This 10th anniversary White Coat Ceremony and STEM Research Symposium is a milestone for the School of Science and a testament to Miami Dade Colleges focus to put students first, especially in the area of STEM, said Dr. Victor Okafor, Dean of the School of Science.

More than 60 students will officially be inducted into MDCs Bachelor of Science in Biological Sciences program during the ceremony. During the event, students and other attendees will hear inspirational reflections from alumni, such as Alejandro Tamayo, a 2020 bachelors graduate who is currently a Ph.D. student in the molecular cell and developmental biology graduate program at the University of Miami. In addition, Paul M.T. Pham, who serves as Director of Research and Development at New Vision Pharmaceuticals, where his mission is making products better through innovation, will deliver a keynote address. With several years in pharmaceutical industry experience, he is knowledgeable about manufacturing, quality control, quality assurance, regulatory, safety and government regulations including FDA and DEA compliance.

On Oct. 30, the STEM Research Symposium will showcase the original research of more than 100 MDC students who worked alongside scientists from MDC, the University of Florida, University of Miami, Nova Southeastern University, Florida Atlantic University, and St. Thomas University, as part of the School of Sciences Summer STEM Research Institute and year-round research program. Undergraduate research is a hands-on learning activity that enriches a students undergraduate experience. Participation in research broadens and deepens the students classroom learning and supports the development of a range of professional skills for the workforce or in pursuit of advanced degrees in STEM areas.

The featured research projects cover a wide variety of fields, including biology, physics, chemistry, microbiology, engineering, and genetics. The Symposium audience will have the exclusive opportunity of joining Genomics expert Carlos Bustamante during his keynote address. Bustamante is a scientist, investor, and entrepreneur focused on the application of data science and genomics technology to problems in medicine, agriculture, and biology. He is on leave from Stanford University where he is a Professor of Biomedical Data Science, Genetics, and Biology. He was founding Director of the Stanford Center for Computational, Evolutionary, and Human Genomics and is Inaugural Chair of the Department of Biomedical Data Science. Bustamante has a passion for building new academic units, non-profits, and companies to solve pressing scientific challenges. He is also currently Founder and Chairman of the Board of Galatea Bio, Inc.; a Director at EdenRoc Sciences, LLC and Etalon DX; Founder of Arc Bio, LLC and CDB Consulting LTD; and has served as SAB member for more than a dozen companies. Carlos received his Ph.D. in Biology and MS in Statistics from Harvard University.

We congratulate undergraduate students for their commitment to scholarship and celebrate the dedication of faculty mentors who ensure the research was realized, said Dr. Loretta Ovueraye, MDCs Vice-Provost of Workforce Programs and Professional Learning,

WHAT: 10th Annual White Coat Ceremony and STEM Research Symposium

WHEN: White Coat Ceremony-Thursday, Oct. 28, at 6 p.m.

STEM Research Symposium- Saturday, Oct. 30, at 9 a.m.

WHERE: MDC North Campus, 11380 NW 27th Avenue

White Coat Ceremony- Science Complex Plaza

STEM Research Symposium -Conference Center, Room 3249

Livestream of White Coat Ceremony will be available at http://www.mdc.edu/livestream

Livestream of STEM Research Symposium will be available at https://libraryguides.mdc.edu/STEMSymposium

For more information, please contact Dr. Victor I. Okafor, Dean of the School of Science, 305-237-1757, vokafor@mdc.edu.

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Miami Dade College to Host 10th Anniversary School of Science White Coat Ceremony and STEM Research Symposium - The Reporter

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