作者
Colin J Carlson, Maxwell J Farrell, Zoe Grange, Barbara A Han, Nardus Mollentze, Alexandra L Phelan, Angela L Rasmussen, Gregory F Albery, Bernard Bett, David M Brett-Major, Lily E Cohen, Tad Dallas, Evan A Eskew, Anna C Fagre, Kristian M Forbes, Rory Gibb, Sam Halabi, Charlotte C Hammer, Rebecca Katz, Jason Kindrachuk, Renata L Muylaert, Felicia B Nutter, Joseph Ogola, Kevin J Olival, Michelle Rourke, Sadie J Ryan, Noam Ross, Stephanie N Seifert, Tarja Sironen, Claire J Standley, Kishana Taylor, Marietjie Venter, Paul W Webala
发表日期
2021/11/8
来源
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B
卷号
376
期号
1837
页码范围
20200358
出版商
The Royal Society
简介
In the light of the urgency raised by the COVID-19 pandemic, global investment in wildlife virology is likely to increase, and new surveillance programmes will identify hundreds of novel viruses that might someday pose a threat to humans. To support the extensive task of laboratory characterization, scientists may increasingly rely on data-driven rubrics or machine learning models that learn from known zoonoses to identify which animal pathogens could someday pose a threat to global health. We synthesize the findings of an interdisciplinary workshop on zoonotic risk technologies to answer the following questions. What are the prerequisites, in terms of open data, equity and interdisciplinary collaboration, to the development and application of those tools? What effect could the technology have on global health? Who would control that technology, who would have access to it and who would benefit from it? Would it …
引用总数
学术搜索中的文章
CJ Carlson, MJ Farrell, Z Grange, BA Han, N Mollentze… - Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, 2021