黑料网

News

Exploring big data for understanding consumer food habits and health

RICHFIELDS aims to design a consumer data platform, to collect and connect, compare and share in-formation about food behaviours.

Bringing together science, industry and technology, RICHFIELDS will utilise previously underexploited 鈥渂ig data鈥 to assess the potential to link and share information generated by us daily (e.g. apps, sensors), as well as by business (e.g. retail and manufactures) and research (e.g. medical, sales, surveillance data).

Aalto University is represented in the RICHFIELDS project by the Department of Communications of Networks (COMNET). Specifically, Aalto will be focusing on a Case Study based on a platform for collection of information (including food intake, physical activity, sleep etc.) and presenting feedback for healthy lifestyle choices.  

鈥淩ICHFIELDS will assess what facilities, resources and services can support research, to learn more about what consumers choose to eat and how and why we make those choices,鈥 said Karin Zimmermann, coordinator of RICHFIELDS at LEI Wageningen UR.

Ultimately, this will support future strategies to improve public health. Stressing the need for world-class research infrastructures, EU Horizon 2020 provided financial support in 2015 for RICHFIELDS.

New ICT technologies bring opportunities for researchers to monitor behaviours, collect information around food choice, and provide personalised feedback. Increasingly, we use mobile apps and tech-wear, recording real-time data about health and behaviour. We might also obtain access to other valuable data, such as health and medical information. Every day, consumers and businesses generate 鈥渂ig data鈥 - large volumes of information, that offer detailed descriptions of behaviours, including time and place (e.g. using GPS). If these data-rich sources could be linked and analysed, they have the potential to contribute greatly towards answering key questions to respond to societal challenges regarding food and health (e.g., obesity, cardiovascular disease, and also sustainability). RICHFIELDS will explore the integration of information (data) on food purchase (e.g. in store), preparation (e.g. in the kitchen) and consumption (e.g. in the dining room).

鈥淢aking the healthy choice the easy choice鈥 requires knowledge about lifestyle choices. This knowledge comes from analysing different types of information on dietary choices such as what food and drinks are we buying, preparing and eating? Where? Why? How? With whom? In what social and physical context? Previous research concluded that these data are fragmented and key information is lacking. Existing datasets are not sufficient to understand our behaviours and help; companies develop products for personal nutrition or for governments to determine the success and failure of public health policies.

RICHFIELDS will identify best practice for extracting business food purchasing and procurement data from new and existing technologies. Furthermore, it will examine the feasibility of linking existing and new research infrastructures, laboratories and facilities, which could enrich the platform. In light of these findings, the project will design the technical requirements to collect, compare and share information about our food behaviour.

鈥淩ICHFIELDS invites stakeholders to discuss issues of data ownership, privacy, intellectual property rights, ethics, and governance structure, and establish rules for the consumer data platform,鈥 said Zimmermann. 

The RICHFIELDS project started 1 October 2015, and is funded for three years. The project is coordinated by LEI Wageningen UR. Sixteen project partners from twelve countries, bring together competences including nutrition, sociology, information management, ICT, business, consumer science, and food processing. This project has received funding from the European Union鈥檚 Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme.

For more information, please visit:

Contact:

Doctoral Researcher Edward Mutafungwa
Aalto University
tel. 050 4355 673
edward.mutafungwa@aalto.fi

richfields@WUR.nl

Coordinator:
Karin Zimmermann, BSc, RM
LEI Wageningen UR
karin.zimmermann@wur.nl

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Outdoor wooden daybeds with sheer beige curtains in a ruined courtyard garden with tall plants.
Cooperation, Press releases, Research & Art Published:

A Finnish working group鈥檚 artwork brings a cooling garden to Spain, which is sweltering in the heat

Through their garden art installation, a group of Finnish architects and artists proposes vegetation and a sense of community, among other things, as solutions to urban heat islands and the environmental crisis.
Five people holding large yellow emoji faces in front of them, standing side by side against a white background
Press releases, Research & Art Published:

RealYou AI will develop the next generation of personalized AI decision assistants

Researchers to build cognitive machine learning that will improve decision-making with instantly personalized intelligent assistance.
Round beige honeycomb-pattern mat with wicker baskets on bright blue background
Press releases, Research & Art Published:

Researchers identify new superconductors, unlocking process that could yield thousands more

Physicists have used machine-learning to discover two new superconductors鈥撯搃t represents a substantial step towards realising massive energy efficiency gains from superconductivity.
A founder pitching his project on stage in fron of an audience
Campus, Research & Art, University Published:

Join the Aalto Startup Center community of startups!

Applications are open for our main accelerator, the Business Generator program. Deadline coming up on August 7th.