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The next day, a small group of researchers, led by associate professor Lauren Gardner in Johns Hopkins University’s Whiting School of Engineering (WSE), unveiled a dashboard that allowed users to track global cases of COVID-19 in real time.
The dashboard, first shared publicly on January 22, illustrates the location and number of confirmed COVID-19 cases, deaths and recoveries for all affected countries. It was developed to provide researchers, public health authorities and the general public with a user-friendly tool to track the outbreak as it unfolds.
It began Jan. 22, 2020 as the COVID-19 Dashboard, operated by the Center for Systems Science and Engineering and the Applied Physics Laboratory. But the map of red dots quickly evolved into the global go-to hub for monitoring a public health catastrophe.
When and why was this map started? The map was first shared publicly on Jan. 22. It was developed to provide researchers, public health authorities, and the general public with a user-friendly tool to track the outbreak as it unfolds.
8 Οκτ 2020 · Dong constructed the dashboard using Esri’s ArcGIS mapping platform, at first entering data manually. That quickly proved unsustainable as coronavirus cases spilled out of mainland China onto every continent. The APL team came on board to streamline the data-entry process.
31 Αυγ 2022 · On Jan 22, 2020, a day after the USA reported its first COVID-19 case, the Johns Hopkins University Center for Systems Science and Engineering (JHU CSSE) launched the first global real-time coronavirus surveillance system: the JHU CSSE COVID-19 Dashboard.
11 Μαρ 2022 · An online dashboard created by two Hopkins engineers that tracked the virus's spread quickly grew into the de facto global source for COVID-19 data. By early March 2020, the map's tiny red dots denoting coronavirus cases had morphed into bright-red masses and the website was attracting millions of visitors per day.