Diesner receives funding for crisis informatics research

Jana Diesner
Jana Diesner, Affiliate Associate Professor

Associate Professor and PhD Program Director Jana Diesner has received a $200,000 grant from the Critical Infrastructure Resilience Institute (CIRI) for her project, "Reliable Extraction of Emergency Response Networks from Text Data and Bench-marking with National Emergency Response Guidelines." CIRI is a Center of Excellence of the Department of Homeland Security that aims to enhance the resiliency of the nation's critical infrastructures.

Diesner's project builds on her earlier CIRI-funded work, where her team studied how methods from AI and machine learning can be used for humanitarian assistance and disaster relief. In their prior work, Diesner's team collaborated with the U.S. Coast Guard to study how the selection of commonly used data sources as well as methods and open-source algorithms for text analysis influences our situational awareness or understanding of emergencies and responses. Her team utilizes natural language processing (NLP) methods to help practitioners gain a reliable synthesis of events and stories from large sets of texts. In their new project, Diesner's team continues their collaboration with the U.S. Coast Guard to assess and combine techniques from NLP and social network analysis to detect and evaluate complex socio-technical networks involved in emergency response efforts.

"This work develops and applies a methodology for comparing policy based on incidence management plans to actions based on empirical evidence and can therefore assist in assessing emergency management policy," Diesner said. "Our work can be used by practitioners to reveal mismatches between policy and practice in a data-driven fashion, which can help to inform policy assessment."

PhD student Ly Dinh, Informatics PhD student Janina Sarol, and MS/IM student Ming Jiang have been assisting with this research.

Diesner leads the Social Computing Lab at the iSchool. Her lab's research in human-centered data science and social computing combines methods from network science, NLP, and machine learning with theories from the social sciences to advance knowledge and discovery about interaction- and information-based systems. Her group brings their basic research into application contexts such as crisis informatics, impact assessment, and bias detection. Diesner received her PhD in Societal Computing from Carnegie Mellon University's School of Computer Science.

Updated on
Backto the news archive

Related News

Knox recognized for public engagement

Associate Professor Emily Knox has been selected as the recipient of the Campus Excellence in Public Engagement Emerging Award. She will be honored on May 28 at a special event hosted by the Office of Public Engagement. 

Emily Knox

Schneider selected as 2024-2025 Harvard Radcliffe Institute Fellow

Associate Professor Jodi Schneider has been selected as a 2024-2025 fellow of the Harvard Radcliffe Institute, an institute of Harvard University that fosters interdisciplinary research across the humanities, sciences, social sciences, arts, and professions.

Jodi Schneider

Fab Lab Engagement Team wins campus award

The Champaign-Urbana (CU) Community Fab Lab Engagement Team has been selected as the recipient of the Campus Excellence in Public Engagement Team Award. The team will be honored on May 28 at a special event hosted by the Office of Public Engagement.

iSchool researchers to present at ACM Web Conference

Members of Associate Professor Dong Wang's research group, the Social Sensing and Intelligence Lab, will present their research at the Web Conference 2024, which will be held from May 13-17 in Singapore. The Web Conference is the premier venue to present and discuss progress in research, development, standards, and applications of topics related to the Web.

Spectrum Scholar Spotlight: Alyssa Brown

Seventeen iSchool master's students have been named 2023-2024 Spectrum Scholars by the American Library Association (ALA) Office for Diversity, Literacy, and Outreach Services. This "Spectrum Scholar Spotlight" series highlights the School's scholars. MSLIS student Alyssa Brown earned her BA in environmental studies from Middlebury College.

Alyssa Brown