Estimating influenza incidence using search query deceptiveness and generalized ridge regression

PLoS Comput Biol. 2019 Oct 1;15(10):e1007165. doi: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007165. eCollection 2019 Oct.

Abstract

Seasonal influenza is a sometimes surprisingly impactful disease, causing thousands of deaths per year along with much additional morbidity. Timely knowledge of the outbreak state is valuable for managing an effective response. The current state of the art is to gather this knowledge using in-person patient contact. While accurate, this is time-consuming and expensive. This has motivated inquiry into new approaches using internet activity traces, based on the theory that lay observations of health status lead to informative features in internet data. These approaches risk being deceived by activity traces having a coincidental, rather than informative, relationship to disease incidence; to our knowledge, this risk has not yet been quantitatively explored. We evaluated both simulated and real activity traces of varying deceptiveness for influenza incidence estimation using linear regression. We found that deceptiveness knowledge does reduce error in such estimates, that it may help automatically-selected features perform as well or better than features that require human curation, and that a semantic distance measure derived from the Wikipedia article category tree serves as a useful proxy for deceptiveness. This suggests that disease incidence estimation models should incorporate not only data about how internet features map to incidence but also additional data to estimate feature deceptiveness. By doing so, we may gain one more step along the path to accurate, reliable disease incidence estimation using internet data. This capability would improve public health by decreasing the cost and increasing the timeliness of such estimates.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Computational Biology / methods*
  • Deception
  • Disease Outbreaks
  • Humans
  • Incidence
  • Influenza, Human / epidemiology*
  • Internet
  • Models, Theoretical
  • Population Surveillance
  • Public Health
  • Records
  • Seasons

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the Laboratory Directed Research and Development program of Los Alamos National Laboratory under project number 2016-0595-ECR. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.