The spread of COVID-19 has led to unprecedented and ongoing changes to daily life, including shelter-in-place orders, widespread closing of businesses and schools, and work-from-home and school-from-home at previously unknown levels. These changes in behavior are placing extraordinary demands on the Internet. This project will measure the Internet’s ability to meet these demands, including comparing its performance before, during, and after the peak of COVID-19; whether the amount of change varies between areas heavily impacted by COVID-19 and those less impacted; and whether and how large networks adapt. To provide this rich understanding, this project will combine multiple Internet-scale datasets that provide complementary views to investigate how responses to COVID-19 have impacted the Internet and how networks have reacted. Measuring the network impact of COVID-19 will illuminate the Internet’s strengths and weak points and is a crucial step towards improving the Internet’s future resilience in the face of pandemics, natural disasters, large scale conflict, and terrorist attacks.

This is project is NOT accepting applications.

Faculty Advisor

  • Professor: Ethan Katz-Bassett
  • Department/School: Electrical Engineering & Computer Science / SEAS
  • My goal is to improve the reliability and performance of Internet services.

Project Timeline

  • Earliest starting date: 10/1/2020
  • End date:
  • Number of hours per week of research expected during Fall 2020: ~12

Candidate requirements

  • Skill sets:
    • Python
    • Basic statistics
    • Scripting
    • Knowledge of Computer Networks and of data science/Big Data processing, is a plus
  • Student eligibility: freshman, sophomore, junior, senior, master’s
  • International students on F1 or J1 visa: eligible
  • Academic Credit Possible: Yes