Use of open mobile mapping tool to assess human mobility traceability in rural offline populations with contrasting malaria dynamics Gabriel Carrasco-Escobar Jan 22, 2019 Go to Project Site PeerJ Human Movement Gabriel Carrasco-Escobar Assistant Professor My research interests include infectious diseases epidemiology, causal inference, global health, Climate Change, Data Science, Urban Health, and Geospatial modeling & viz. Related Use of open mobile mapping tool to assess human mobility traceability in rural offline populations with contrasting malaria dynamics Quantifying the effect of human population mobility on malaria risk in the Peruvian Amazon Quantifying the effect of human population mobility on malaria risk in the Peruvian Amazon Open-Source 3D Printable GPS Tracker to Characterize the Role of Human Population Movement on Malaria Epidemiology in River Networks: A Proof-of-Concept Study in the Peruvian Amazon Open-Source 3D Printable GPS Tracker to Characterize the Role of Human Population Movement on Malaria Epidemiology in River Networks: A Proof-of-Concept Study in the Peruvian Amazon