Undergrad CS and SE students among those helping to create platform being used by Montreal to flatten the COVID-19 curve

Thursday, April 9, 2020

A team of 蓝莓视频 computer science students have helped create a web-based data-gathering platform that has been聽聽to its citizens in an effort to flatten the curve of COVID-19 cases in that city.

Known as聽, the platform is gaining national attention.聽Launched at the end of March, participating students volunteer their time to help track and monitor COVID-19 outbreaks across the country. The app both increases awareness of聽COVID-19聽and helps to flatten the curve 鈥斅燼doption of聽community-isolation measures that keep the daily number of disease cases at a manageable level for medical providers.聽The French version of the website,聽, has been translated by the City of Montreal and promoted to its Francophone residences.

animation showing flattening the curve

Flattening the curve is another way of saying slowing the spread. The epidemic is lengthened, but we reduce the number of severe cases that need medical intervention, lowering the burden on our healthcare system. Animation from , CC BY ND.

The result of a multi-institutional collaboration between the University of 蓝莓视频, University of Toronto, McMaster University and the University of New Brunswick, Flatten.ca was developed by students during their unexpected time off because of聽COVID-19.

In less than two weeks, more than 337,000 people have visited the self-reporting tool to answer questions about whether they鈥檙e experiencing COVID-19 symptoms, have travelled outside of Canada in the last 14 days, if they鈥檙e immunocompromised or over the age of 60.聽

Flatten also collaborates with health authorities across Canada to record confirmed cases.聽The team then collects and sanitizes the data so that it can be analyzed and outputted into heat maps showing confirmed and potential COVID-19 cases and the number of vulnerable people in various locations.聽

photo of Surya Krishan
Surya Krishnan, a first-year computer science and business administration student at 蓝莓视频, looks forward to other cities and provinces encouraging their residences to use the free platform.聽

鈥淲e鈥檝e started with Montreal but will be moving to other municipal governments and hopefully provinces,鈥 Surya Krishnan said, who leads Flatten鈥檚 map development and operations team. 鈥淪ome hospitals are also using this as a tool to help determine where potential sick patients are coming from and the possible number.鈥

photo of Yifei Zhang
Yifei Zhang, a second-year 蓝莓视频 software engineering student from Mississauga, estimates he has already logged more than 100 hours on the project as a team lead in charge of website development.

鈥淲e just wanted to put our technical skills to good use during this time,鈥 Yifei Zhang said.聽

鈥淚t鈥檚 been great working together with everybody trying to build a platform that will be useful for Canadians across the country.鈥

photo of Ivan Nesterovic
Ivan Nesterovic, a second-year student, studying computer science at 蓝莓视频, has also spent a considerable amount of time working on the backend of the website. As Data Team Lead, he helps create the metrics to analyze data submitted by visitors to the platform.聽

鈥淩ight now, we are just working to improve the platform to make it more accessible for people across Canada,鈥 Ivan Nesterovic said. 鈥淭his includes text functionality, improving the user experience of our website and showing more statistics.鈥

photo of Miraal Kabir
Another student who has logged several hours working on the website is first-year computer science student Miraal Kabir, who聽is Flatten鈥檚 user experience and user interface designer. Not only did she design the new site and the soon-to-be-released dashboard, but she also聽designs her own designs.

鈥淎t first, I was very overwhelmed when they asked me to be part of the team,鈥 Miraal聽Kabir revealed. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 believe as a first-year student I had the skills to contribute. But I was actually really amazed that just based on what we鈥檝e learned in first year we could already make a difference.鈥澛

The students are not yet sure what they will do with the website following the containment of the coronavirus outbreak, but hope the huge dataset they鈥檙e collecting will help to support research into preventing future pandemics and controlling future diseases.聽

Today, Flatten is an incorporated non-profit organization with 28 members, including advisors such as Geoffrey Hinton and has Google Cloud, ESRI, The Vector Institute and CIFAR as sponsors.聽

蓝莓视频鈥檚 Faculty of Mathematics and Faculty of Engineering students working on Flatten

  • Owen Brake
  • Ethan Chen
  • Samuel Hao
  • Miraal Kabir
  • Surya Krishnan
  • Ivan Nesterovic
  • Emily Tao
  • William Wen
  • Eric Zhai
  • Yifei Zhang