Until recently, the team was also supported by an EXIST start-up grant. Murmuras' software enables researchers to independently record the smartphone behavior of study participants in detail via app and to analyze the data on the platform. On the basis of this data, context-related questions can also be asked as push messages - for example, in the case of increased WhatsApp usage: "What is your emotional state?” Possible areas of application for the technology include research into mental illness, including depression, mobility behavior, private consumption or the use of social media. The start-up is already cooperating with several universities, including those in Tübingen, Salzburg, Witten/Herdecke and Vechta. Murmuras has also been working with Prof. Dr. Ute Nöthlings from the Institute of Nutrition and Food Sciences at the University of Bonn for a long time.
Alexander Markowetz, former junior professor for computer science at the University of Bonn, says: "Many academic institutions, students and researchers lack the technical know-how and financial power to conduct such smartphone-based studies on their own ". The company name derives from "murmuration", the complex swarming behavior of starlings. "In a similar way, Murmuras investigates the dynamics of human behavior of large cohorts," adds Konrad Blaszkiewicz, doctoral student in computer science at the University of Bonn.
The starting point of the start-up is the Menthal App, a free software developed in 2014 by scientists at the University of Bonn to give smartphone users feedback on their mobile phone habits. How much time do users spend on the phone every day? Which applications do they use most often? More than 700,000 mobile phone users took part in the project. "There were numerous inquiries from researchers who wanted to use the same technology - this was ultimately the impetus for the spin-off," reports Ionut Andone, also a doctoral student in computer science at the University of Bonn. The Menthal Project also provides one of the largest data sets on human behavior for academic research.
The team at the “Transfer Center enaCom” of the University of Bonn supported the start-up from the very beginning. "In the age of digital epidemiology, the Murmuras software offers a broad basis for the most diverse applications," says Rüdiger Wolf. "The potential in this field is enormous."
Contact:
Murmuras
Qais Kasem
Phone: 0228 96597711
Email: qais@murmuras.com
https://murmuras.com/