NASA’s Workforce Aids in Fight Against COVID-19

On April 1, NASA launched an agency-wide call for ideas on its IdeaScale crowdsourcing platform NASA@WORK for how the agency could leverage its expertise and capabilities to help the nation with the unprecedented crisis caused by the COVID pandemic. In just two weeks, 250 ideas were submitted, more than 500 comments were submitted, and more than 4,500 votes were cast.

HR Technology News: HR Tech Leader Aliro is the Powerhouse Behind New D&I Job Referral Site

Those ideas informed a number of different projects in three discrete categories: personal protective equipment, ventilation devices, and the monitoring and forecasting of the spread and impacts of the virus.

The NASA@WORK ideas added value to several projects, including one using NASA’s supercomputing capability to advance research for treatments and a vaccine, as well as offering artificial intelligence expertise to develop new data mining techniques for answering high-priority questions related to COVID-19.

HR Technology News: Terra Dotta Announces SAP Concur Partnership to Expand Domestic and Global Travel Management Footprint

Other ideas have informed efforts that have led to new virus tracking and forecast modeling apps, 3D printed masks and other PPE equipment, impact visualizations, NASA-modified ventilators, sensors for virus detection, and more. Seven of those ideas have already been implemented, but if additional funding is found, more will continue to aid in the battle against COVID-19.

NASA@WORK is an internal, agency-wide platform that provides NASA employees an unconventional and inventive way to share knowledge and advance projects. Under the charge of NASA SOLVE, it is a one-stop-shop for all challenges and competitions related to the agency’s mission, NASA@WORK fosters collaboration across the entire NASA community through interactive discussion and challenge-solving.

HR Technology News: TecHRseries Interview with Gianni Giacomelli, Chief Innovation Officer at Genpact

Write in to psen@itechseries.com to learn more about our exclusive editorial packages and programs.

3D printed masksCOVID-19HR TechnologyIdeaScaleNASANEWSPPE equipment
Comments (1)
Add Comment