Published February 20, 2017 This content is archived.
Like a teenager’s bedroom, big data is often messy.
Malfunctioning computers, data-entry errors and other hard-to-spot problems can skew datasets and mislead people — everyone from data scientists to data hobbyists — trying to draw conclusions from raw data.
Vizier, a software tool under development by a UB-led research team, aims to proactively catch those errors.
The project, backed by a $2.7 million National Science Foundation grant, launched in January. Like Excel and other spreadsheet software, Vizier will allow users to interactively work with datasets. For example, it will help people explore, clean, curate and visualize data in meaningful ways, as well as spot errors and offer solutions.
But unlike spreadsheet software, Vizier is intended for much larger datasets; it will be used to examine millions or billions of data points, as opposed to the hundreds or thousands typically plugged into spreadsheet software.
“We are creating a tool that’ll let you work with the data you have, and also unobtrusively make helpful observations like ‘Hmm... have you noticed that two out of a million records make a 10 percent difference in this average?’” says Oliver Kennedy, assistant professor of computer science and engineering, and the grant’s principal investigator.
Co-principal investigators include Juliana Freire, professor of computer science and engineering at New York University, and Boris Glavic, assistant professor in the Department of Computer Science at the Illinois Institute of Technology. The award is from NSF’s Data Infrastructure Building Blocks (DIBBs) program.
For years, companies like Google, Microsoft and Apple have utilized big data to improve their products and services. That same power is now spreading to the masses as government agencies in the United States and elsewhere publish massive amounts of public data on the internet.
For example, New York City and the federal government have open data portals making it possible for anyone with an internet connection to download information and ask questions about their government. When properly used, these portals can shed light on issues relating to health code violations, discrimination, bias and other matters, Kennedy says.
Vizier will be released as free, open-source software.
“We want to make it easier for data scientists — and eventually data hobbyists — to discover and communicate not only what the data says, but why the data says that,” he says.