
Abstract: As data-driven decision-making has proliferated across sectors, nonprofits have lagged behind industry and academia due to funding and resource constraints. Nonprofits aiming to turn data into tangible, meaningful insights are faced with several challenges, including limited bandwidth and technical expertise to tackle data collection, management, and analysis; and limited data availability given the scale of their programming. Given these challenges, nonprofits’ efforts to adopt new technologies and engage in data collection and analysis has only recently taken shape.
Over the last 5 years, Data Clinic, the data and tech for good philanthropic arm of investment manager Two Sigma, has utilized employee volunteer teams to partner with nonprofits and develop pro bono solutions that enable these organizations to use data more effectively. Over the course of working on these projects, we noticed that some hurdles are common to multiple organizations and found across different sectors. While volunteer efforts can help organizations on an individual basis, we believe that open source tooling that addresses these specific challenges is key to scaling capacity and moving the entire sector forward.
In this vein, some of Data Clinic’s recent efforts have been around developing open source tools that aid nonprofits across various stages of the data pipeline. In this talk, we will highlight two such open source applications, Smooshr and NewerHoods. Aided by machine learning techniques, Smooshr is designed to help consolidate and redefine categories within data sets through an easy-to-use interactive web application. NewerHoods, on the other hand, is a web application that allows users to visualize and interact with spatial data using a geo-clustering technique to help observe underlying spatial patterns.
Bio: Stuart Lynn is a data scientist at the Data Clinic at Two Sigma. He helps our nonprofit partners use data to better serve their communities, conducts independent research and develops new tooling that enhances the use of open data. Stuart is a firm believer that access to good data and tools can be a game-changer, having previously spent 6 years working at the Zooniverse, the world’s largest collection of online citizen science projects, and also headed up data science at CARTO, a company that specializes in making spatial data and analysis accessible.
Stuart holds a PhD in Astrophysics and a Masters in Mathematical Physics from the University of Edinburgh. When not working at Data Clinic you can find Stuart buried in his side projects, including building tools to explore historic maps, creative coding and tinkering with hardware.

Stuart Lynn, PhD
Title
Data Scientist | Data Clinic, Two Sigma
