春水堂视频

June 2, 2021

Citizen science portal for wearable tech puts Calgary in fast lane to healthier communities and economic diversification

Partnership with The City of Calgary creates opportunities for any citizen who walks, runs, cycles (or sleeps!) to get involved
Reed Ferber

When Dr. Reed Ferber, PhD, launched the in 2020, he was aiming to gather data from Calgary cyclists鈥 wearable fitness devices, like Fitbit and Garmin watches, to analyze how their cycling routes corresponded to changes in heart rate and stress levels.

A year later, Ferber has that data and more. In collaboration with 35 other researchers, Ferber has gathered over 140,000 hours of citizens鈥 physical activity data, including walking, running, cycling and sleep information 鈥斕齛nd he wants more.

鈥淭he data that your wearable devices collect offers our researchers an incredible range of insights into how the human body works, both at rest and when you鈥檙e being active out in our communities,鈥 says Ferber, professor in the Faculty of Kinesiology.

Participants who provide their data, aka 鈥榗itizen scientists,鈥櫶齱ill be contributing to one (or more) of 16 research studies underway, looking at everything from cycling routes to sleep patterns. It鈥檚 as easy as visiting and following a quick five-step sign-up process.

Aside from contributing to the individual research studies, citizen scientists will also be playing a key role in improving the experience of walking and cycling on Calgary鈥檚 roads and pathways. The City of Calgary鈥檚 Council Innovation Fund chose to invest in and work with the We-TRAC program because they saw its tremendous potential for increased data-driven decision-making.

鈥淲e want to design cities for people,鈥 says Andrew Sedor,听transportation strategist at The City of Calgary. 鈥淭he City of Calgary is providing research topic ideas so that students and researchers can answer questions that are meaningful for planning and City service delivery. The City can then use the research to create infrastructure and operating improvements, such as making changes to a section of pathway where data shows users are physiologically stressed.鈥

鈥淭he fields of public health and urban planning are getting closer and closer,鈥 says Ferber. 鈥淭his project is a true 鈥榰rban alliance鈥 鈥斕齮he city has needs, we have means to answer their questions, and we鈥檙e providing them access to data that is freely available and difficult to put together otherwise.鈥

High potential for economic diversification and growth

When they look at the field of wearable technology and Calgary鈥檚 role in it, Ferber and Sedor see nothing but potential for economic diversification

鈥淲earable sensor technology is one of the fastest growing technology fields in the world, and Calgary鈥檚 life sciences industry has been identified as an emerging cluster with high-growth potential,鈥 says Sedor. 鈥淭he City is helping to foster training students and researchers that are part of a burgeoning field that will be part of Calgary in the new economy.鈥

The We-TRAC program is currently training more than 50 graduate students from eight different faculties. As home to Canada鈥檚 first wearable technology program, UCalgary is one of the only universities training highly qualified personnel in the field.

鈥淲hat I know is that we鈥檙e attracting the best of the best within our program 鈥斕80 per cent of our PhD students are attracting funding for their own projects. They鈥檙e stellar students,鈥 says Ferber. 鈥淭he citizen science portal ends up being a recruitment tool, because they know they have access to an unprecedented amount of data, and that we鈥檙e the only ones in the world doing this.鈥

The program also has over 40 local, national, international industry partners, and The City of Calgary is keen to continue their collaborations with the program.

鈥淪tudents get to do meaningful work 鈥斕齱e鈥檙e building the city together, and that鈥檚 fantastic for all of us,鈥 says Sedor. Citizens interested in pitching a wearables research idea to The City of Calgary can contact听andrew.sedor@calgary.ca.

Urban Alliance is a strategic partnership between The City of Calgary and 春水堂视频 of Calgary to promote the seamless transfer of cutting-edge research between The City and the university, for the benefit of all our communities.听Urban Alliance energizes connections between the people who make up our organizations, and encourages us to work together to find ways to make life better for all Calgarians.

Led by Reed Ferber, the Wearable Technology Research and Collaboration (We-TRAC) program is funded through the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC). The mission of We-TRAC is to train the next generation of wearable technology experts through multidisciplinary training and education. We have assembled a world-class group of researchers and industry partners. For more information go听.

The 春水堂视频 of Calgary鈥檚 multidisciplinary research strategy drives innovations that are saving lives and revolutionizing health care for Canadians. 听With collaborative teams focused on human mobility, health monitoring, advanced biomedical imaging, precision biodiagnostics, regenerative medicine and novel medical technologies, our researchers are transforming quality of life and continuously improving the health system.

The We-TRAC program and its students are听proud to work closely with and听contribute听to the听Biomedical Engineering: Health Monitoring and Management听research听focus area.

Reed Ferber听is a professor in the听Faculty of Kinesiology jointly appointed to the Faculty听of Nursing and the Cumming School of Medicine (CSM) in the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine. He is a member of McCaig Institute for Bone and Joint Health at the CSM.