International Business Machines Corp said on Wednesday it would provide its technology and resources to help track the spread of the Zika virus.
Oswaldo
Cruz Foundation (Fiocruz), a leading research institution affiliated
with the Brazilian Ministry of Health, plans to use IBM's technology to
analyze information from official data about human travel patterns
to
anecdotal observations recorded on social media.
Global
health officials are racing to better understand the Zika virus, which
has caused a major outbreak that began in Brazil last year and has
spread to many countries in the Americas.
IBM
also said it plans to donate a one-year subscription feed of highly
local, daily rainfall, average temperature and relative humidity data to
the U.S. Fund for United Nations Children's Emergency Fund (UNICEF).
Rainfall,
temperature and humidity play key roles in the development of the Aedes
aegypti mosquito, which carries Zika as well as dengue, chikungunya and
Yellow Fever.
IBM is also collaborating with the
New York-based Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies to collect and mine
biological and ecological data to help devise algorithms that can
determine which primates are carriers for the virus.
IBM also runs the 'OpenZika project' on the company's World Community Grid, a crowd-sourced supercomputer.
The
initiative allows scientists in the United States and Brazil to screen
millions of chemical compounds to identify candidates to combat the
virus.
More than a dozen small biotech firms and
other organizations are developing vaccines against Zika, which is
linked to birth defects and neurological disorders, although most work
is at a nascent stage.
Google, a unit of Alphabet
Inc, said in March it was working with UNICEF to analyze data in an
effort to map and anticipate the spread of the virus.
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