Publications by authors named "Anmol Madan"

Background: Diabetes management is complex, and program personalization has been identified to enhance engagement and clinical outcomes in diabetes management programs. However, 50% of individuals living with diabetes are unable to achieve glycemic control, presenting a gap in the delivery of self-management education and behavior change. Machine learning and recommender systems, which have been used within the health care setting, could be a feasible application for diabetes management programs to provide a personalized user experience and improve user engagement and outcomes.

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Article Synopsis
  • Regular physical activity significantly improves blood glucose levels in individuals with type 2 diabetes, with a notable reduction of 13 mg/dL in weekly fasting blood glucose (FBG) when moving from a sedentary to an active lifestyle.
  • A study analyzed over 9,500 Livongo members' weekly physical activity, noting influences like medication use and demographics while focusing on step counts and daily active minutes.
  • Engaging in just one additional day of at least 8,000 steps can lead to a 0.47 mg/dL reduction in average weekly FBG, highlighting the importance of moderate to vigorous physical activity for diabetes management.
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Research has mostly focused on obesity and not on processes of BMI change more generally, although these may be key factors that lead to obesity. Studies have suggested that obesity is affected by social ties. However these studies used survey based data collection techniques that may be biased toward select only close friends and relatives.

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The World Wide Web is commonly seen as a platform that can harness the collective abilities of large numbers of people to accomplish tasks with unprecedented speed, accuracy, and scale. To explore the Web's ability for social mobilization, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) held the DARPA Network Challenge, in which competing teams were asked to locate 10 red weather balloons placed at locations around the continental United States. Using a recursive incentive mechanism that both spread information about the task and incentivized individuals to act, our team was able to find all 10 balloons in less than 9 hours, thus winning the Challenge.

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