Duke Wraps Fourth Annual DataFest Stats Competition

Duke University held ASA DataFest 2015 March 20-22, 2015. It was the university's fourth-annual 48-hour statistics and data analysis competition.

More than 220 students from multiple universities and a variety of academic disciplines competed in teams of two to five students. When the competition began at 6 p.m. on Friday night, each team was presented with a single data set, which consisted of five tables and millions of rows of visitor information from a comparison shopping site. Consultants from businesses and area schools were on hand to answer questions. The teams had until 5 p.m. on Sunday to identify and communicate insights into the data and present their ideas to the judges. Prizes were awarded for best visualization, best insight and best use of outside data.

The team that won for best visualization developed a flow diagram and network graph to help the company target its advertising based on trends in customer preferences. The team that won for best insight found a way to help the company identify customers likely to spend more than they planned based on their demographics and Web browsing behavior. The team that won for best use of outside data combined their assigned data set with outside data on political preferences to find out if people from left- or right-leaning cities were more likely to buy environmentally friendly products.

The competition fostered interdisciplinary collaboration between students from diverse fields such as economics, sociology, political science, math and engineering, in addition to statistics, according to Justin Yu, a participant in the competition. For many of the students, it was their first time working with real-world data sets.

"In most courses, the problems are guided and it is very clear what you need to accomplish and how," said Tori Hall, a junior at Duke, in a prepared statement. "DataFest is much more like the real world, where you’re given data and have to find your own way to produce something meaningful."

ASA DataFest 2015 was organized by the by the Department of Statistical Science at Duke University and co-hosted by the Department of Statistics and Operations Research at the University of North Carolina and Department of Statistics at North Carolina State University.

About the Author

Leila Meyer is a technology writer based in British Columbia. She can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • robot hand holding stacks of coins

    Designing AI Systems for Financial Aid

    Financial aid offices have been slow to adopt AI, risking technological stagnation at a critical early student touchpoint. Systematic AI integration can improve student experiences and strengthen institutional positioning.

  • glowing ai text in a digital cube surrounded by data elements

    USC Launches AI Initiative to Accelerate Innovation in Health Sciences, Security, Business, and the Arts

    The University of Southern California recently announced that it has launched a "transformational" new AI initiative thanks to a $200M gift from venture capitalist Mark Stevens and his wife. The project will leverage AI toward breakthroughs and innovations in subjects like the health sciences, business, security, and the arts.

  • Abstract neural network 3D illustration

    Intel® AI EmpowerED: The AI-Ready Campus, Delivered

    Artificial intelligence is transforming higher education, prompting institutions to rethink how they manage infrastructure, security, governance, and workforce readiness. Successful adoption requires a strategic, institution-wide approach that aligns AI initiatives with educational goals, faculty enablement, and scalable operational frameworks.

  • digital data protection and cyber security

    White House Launches New AI Security Framework

    President Donald Trump has issued a new executive order aimed at maintaining United States AI leadership while addressing the security risks posed by increasingly powerful AI systems.