Crowdsourcing Solutions for COVID-19: What Engineers Can Expect

By Sreevas Sahasranamam, Ph.D.

COVID-19 is having a marked impact on all walks of life — social, economic, political, emotional, and obviously health perspective. Given the wide-ranging impact, a number of online platforms have come up, asking for ideas, technologies and solutions on all these fronts. For instance, governments have come up with portals such as COVID-19 solution challenge; technical associations like IEEE have opened funding calls for supporting COVID-19 projects; start-up incubators have launched campaigns like BreakCorona to offer support to innovations for COVID-19. The common underlying thread to all these portals is the reliance on the wisdom of online crowd to offer solutions, which is popularly called crowdsourcing. In this post, the focus is on crowdsourcing of technological innovations for combating COVID-19 challenges, with some pointers on what engineers should expect while developing solutions in such emergencies.

IEEE has had a pioneering role in employing crowdsourcing for tackling social challenges. IEEE Special Interest Group in Humanitarian Technology (SIGHT) is an impactful model in this regard, which brings together engineering students to develop ideas for solving global humanitarian challenges. One of the initial crowdsourcing initiatives of IEEE SIGHT, which I was also lucky to have been a part of during my engineering days, was the IEEE Humanitarian Page Contest in 2011-2012. This was an initiative of IEEE Region 10 Humanitarian committee, to develop a web portal that would create awareness on the humanitarian challenges and to establish a discussion forum where engineering student volunteers from across the globe could participate to develop solutions. Our initial analysis on the response to this web-portal was very encouraging, both on the front of student engagement and idea quality, making a strong case for scaling up such an approach for meeting social challenges. Disaster and pandemic situations like COVID-19, however, pose an additional layer of complexity given the very short response time that is available to meet with the social challenges. In prior instances of earthquakes and floods, crowdsourced platforms — such as Digital Humanitarian Network, Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team, and KeralaRescue —have proved to be quite valuable.

What do engineering innovators need to expect while being part of crowdsourced solutions to COVID-19?

Acknowledgement: The author would like to thank Sahil Sameer, a key volunteer who was part of the KeralaRescue team for his inputs on it.


Dr. Sreevas Sahasranamam is Chancellor’s Fellow (Lecturer/Assistant Professor) at Strathclyde Business School, Glasgow, United Kingdom. He may be contacted at sreevas.sahasranamam@strath.ac.uk, or connect with him on LinkedIn.

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