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Citizen Science - Science topic

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After reading an interesting article Wallace J, Goldsmith-Pinkham P, Schwartz JL. Excess Death Rates for Republican and Democratic Registered Voters in Florida and Ohio During the COVID-19 Pandemic. JAMA Intern Med. 2023;183(9):916–923. doi:10.1001/jamainternmed.2023.1154, I rethought my old results. Help me confirm/reject one of the hypotheses of my Citizen Science research. I am not a political scientist and I admit that my results may be the result of a methodological error.
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Hello,
My name is Chris Frederick.
I'm based in London. I'm conducting a Citizen Science investigative review of mental health services for the London Black community.
So far I've conducted 120 interviews and I need to move into the Data Analysis phase. I'm worried that I'm out of my depth and need some support.
Can anyone help with advice, tips or provide some mentorship please?
Regards,
Chris Frederick
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Hi Chris. Please email me at reaveyp@lsbu.ac.uk and we can discuss?
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Hi, I've incorporated the use of iNaturalist (via creating projects with the orientation of areas) in specific areas that combine outstanding natural and cultural beauty. Specifically, I developed two different tours in different locales, that include the generation of narratives (based on local legends, historic and mythoplastic, that also connect the story with certain museum artifacts) in the context of treasure hunt through geocaching. Each tour consists of a number of stations where each geocache is hidden containing puzzles and information that once solved lead the participant to a new station until they get to the final resolution of the mystery. During their journey along the different stations, they read the narratives, and they also record biodiversity via iNaturalist and at some point they conduct river measurements with the aid of certain organology and record their results, regarding physicochemical parameters and also qualitative elements of the river, etc. Any ideas on how could I also incorporate citizen science also for cultural heritage as well? I was thinking as a next step of my research to expand, through organizing workshops introducing my elements for developing my two tours, and then having small teams (possibly an educator, museum personel, personel of centres of environmental education, local people), generating their own material about their own region. Further, if any relevant literature cross your mind, please send me, thank you.
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Jens Kleb Sherrie-Lee Evans I would like to thank you both for your answers. In regards to local companies, the last year I ve been thinking to engage local shop owners and companies by incorporating traditional products and even packaging in the treasure hunt. Collecting photos of the 2-3 centuries old stone bridges by the participants would be a great idea. What concerns me is the volume of data, uploading them on a page via a social utility might effectively work. This may work with stories as well, I will be having teams of 4-5 in each of the 4 regions (villages) to generate their own narratives through local legends, history and even mythoplastic stories. However collecting stories together with photos through a page sounds a great idea to start with. I should be able to come up with a research question, thank you!
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Are there discrepancies between the environmental agency data on water quality and data gotten from Citizen Science?
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Certainly, not all information obtained is accurate, we need accurate data and checks to prove the accuracy of the data
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Dear Researchers on Landslides
On 4th January, 2010, a large rock slide (landslide) suddenly occurred on right bank of Hunza river and dammed the river.
Prior to this failure, local people of Attabad village submitted a complaint to government about the slope creeping and falling of stones.
On the basis of this local information, a field work was conducted by federal government department known as Geological Survey of Pakistan. During this field campaign, historical information about earthquake effect on this terrace slope was obtained. Anthropological effect in the form of irrigation by local people was also observed.
After having this major information by the general public participation, it may be inferred that the Citizen science is a major precursor of Attabad Landslide of Hunza area from northern Pakistan.
It is requested that researchers on landslides from all over the world may contribute by making technical comments.
Regards
Ijaz
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Geologists, soil scientists and others have learned to detect indicators of instability. I mentioned some of these in our paper on Watershed Restoration after Calamity. Observant landowners and citizens can also identify some of these indicators, and bring attention to them. Irrigation as well as channel instability from both aggradation or degradation can be contributors as well as the more recognized land clearing, road construction with cut and fill slopes and associated hydrologic and slope modifications. Although various signs of instability may be present, extreme rainfall event can sometimes trigger conditions and initiate failure. Although LiDAR coverage can be very helpful in identifying areas of instability, the regular interpretation of aerial photo pairs in stereo can also be helpful, and what was often used in the past to help identify areas of instability, for further field analysis. As indicated, citizen involvement can be helpful for suggesting further analysis, or initiate safety measures or activity adjustments.
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As project leader on the Danish Fungal Atlas (https://svampe.databasen.org/), I am curiuos to know if registration of macrofungal findings happens on any larger scale in the Mediterranen countries.
In Denmark, and several other countries in Northern Europe, we now have datarich, well curated databases storing millions of fungal records. Apart from helping in consolidating species concepts (partly supported by DNA sequencing work) these databases have boosted knowledge on fungal biodiveisty and has helped to bring fungi on the nature conservation agenda as reported in this paper: https://www.sciencedirect.com/.../pii/S0006320719303714
Due to language barriers it is not easy for me to get deeper insight into what happens in countries like Greece, Italy, Spain and France, but judging from species distribution maps of widespread species in GBIF, the level of data-sharing is not high. I would be very happy to learn more, both from pure curiosity, but also for potential collaborations in a project application working with citizen science in mycology
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Dear Jacob,
Congratulations for the initiative! Your efforts in Denmark and the outstanding "Danish Fungal Atlas" are really inspiring! I would like to inform you that our fungal research team (at the Laboratory of General and Agricultural Microbiology, Agricultural University of Athens) is in close collaboration with citizen scientists and members of the (very active and productive!) "Greek Mushroom Society" (GMS). Our ongoing project is to identify as many records as possible through sequencing and detailed microscopical examination. Our goals include the phylogenetic study of selected fungal groups and the compilation of an updated checklist of the Greek macrofungi. We will be glad to join forces with you towards this end!
Best wishes,
George Zervakis
(on behalf of Elias Polemis and my other collaborators at the Lab and at the GMS)
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Do there exist open data online sites where one can submit nematode micrographs, VCE videos, and image metadata? A content management system like Drupal could work. The level of effort and maintenance of such a site would be high.
Extending NemSyst (https://nemys.ugent.be/) with a citizen science add-on that allows users to submit observations?
Many of the existing sites are not quite there yet as far as nematodes go. iNaturalist.org is close -- https://www.inaturalist.org/. May be able to make it work?
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What we are doing in Research Gate can be considered as Citizen Sciences?
What do you think, please kindly write your own idea?
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Sincerely appreciated all answers and helps!
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Blood pressure research is becoming more accessible due to new technologies. Do you agree that representatives of the nursing students and Citizen Science can and should participate in the discussion of normal blood pressure values?
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Dear Ruben, thank you. I`ll try to use your reply when summarizing the discussion.
Regards, Anatoly
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Are there 'apps' that allow (or would allow) people around the world to declare known deaths related to Covid-19? The data quality would certainly be controversial, but this would be an interesting social as well as statistical process...
The reasoning for such an initiative (that could be seen as a contribution to "citizens' science), is to counter-act a systematic incompleteness and distorsion, visible since February 2020, in the way that the counting of "confirmed" infection cases and of "deaths" (in hospitals) and of numbers in "intensive care" (again, almost exclusively in hospitals), has crowded out the wider observation of the epidemic and its effects.
There is a flagrant phenomenon of statistical "horse and rabbit stew", which is relayed in permanence as a sort of journalistic schizophrenia.   -- The "confirmed" infections, intensive care, deaths (etc.) numbers are given, day by day, with a spurious 7 significant figure format.
-- These super-precise institutional figures are, through the media, assorted with occasional commentaries and sporadic articles to the effect that the real figures are "almost certainly" (sic) much higher .... because of uncounted deaths in old peoples' homes, because of 'unconfirmed' deaths in the community, etc., etc. 
The fact that the "real" figures are CERTAINLY much higher than the "official" (sic) institutional statistics, is the rather obvious elephant in the room.  How can it be that, even after 3 months of continuous journalistic (and scientific) attention, there is still little more than false pudeur about the "difficulty" of getting the "true" numbers, about the need to look at the month-by-month trends of "excess mortality", and so on?
The answer to this question is certainly to b e sought, and found, at the level of institutional/ideological factors that are generating and maintaining (1) the "invisibility" of the deaths that are not administered by national health services and, as a corollary, (2) the invisibility of the "gap" between the official numbers and the 'true' facts. While waiting for the Hegelian tribunal of history to unmask these distorsions, why not exploit social networking in order to build "citizens' data bases declaring known deaths related to Covid-19? Or, is this already being done in some countries? If so, are there ways that it might be done in a concerted and more visible way (without being pirated by the GAFA & Co.)?
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Is there such an app?
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I am planning a citizen science project where participants will be asked to log the occurrence and magnitude of gastrointestinal events throughout the day. Is there an app that would be well suited for this (for both iOS and Android)? Ideally one that requires only the press of a button to log an event to keep it as simple as possible.
Thank you for any answers
Jonas
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You may want to look at Open Data Kit: https://getodk.org/
Both are form/survey orientated, but with the right setup you could have something that effectively worked as a dedicated app would - for a relatively simple task as described.
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Recently, citizen science projects take a big part of the scientific community all around the World. Thus, non-scientists can meaningfully contribute to scientific research. Is it a good thing?
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Great, the same for photographing wildlife species, people helped scientists to record the existence of some species in some unfamiliar areas. Otherwise, and in addition to what you have mentioned, citizens may have a lack of experience to give a reliable product to the scientific community.
Thank you for your comment.
M. B.
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An extensive systematic search resulted in an overview of all the animal victims from covid litter found worldwide, including entanglements, ingestions, and entrapments. Thanks to nature photographers, animal rescue centers, birdwatchers and litter pickers, we learned a great deal about just how harmful PPE products can be. Monkeys, fishes, hedgehogs, penguins, crabs, and many more animals are affected, even pets like cats and dogs.
Share your observations!
We started a database where anyone can share further observations of interactions between animals and PPE litter. As we only searched for articles in English and Dutch and found mainly cases from the UK, USA, and The Netherlands, we expect that there must be many more examples! Feel free to add your own observations or add new examples - from your local or national news, or social media - that are currently missing in the global overview. Let us know!
Find the overview at: www.covidlitter.com
Thanks.
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It affected badly.
Thank yu for this platform
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I am using BISON, a web service that gives public GIS information, and they recently added citizen science mapping of various invasive species to their site. I am wanting to use the BISON data to analyze an invasive species prominent in Tennessee. However I am wanting to compare the accuracy of this citizen science to another map, though I am not sure which direction to go about finding this other map to compare and remotely sense the specific invasive species I am looking for. I am also wanting to look at taking a different direction with the BISON data and seeing if I can analysis a pattern of early detection in the species, but not sure how I can use GIS to do that specifically. The problem is that I figure I try to see if I can remotely sense this data all while being in a different state than Tennessee. A push in the right direction would greatly be appreciated.
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I think you can use landsat 8 images if the invasive species has spread in a larger area. Something like NDVI would help to differentiate.
If you can get areal images by yourself, try a software like eCognition by Timble. ArcMap would also do a simple classification.
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Hello everyone:
I am interested in exploring the use of some real datasets on species polymorfism and other resources for teaching purposes in my Evolution classes. I have recently known about the Evolution Megalab citizen science project on banded snails (like Cepaea) in Europe. Thousands of results can be easily found on Google using this keyword, and I know that some papers have been published about it.
But... I can not find right now where the website is actually located.
Any help from you will be very welcome. Best regards:
Jose.
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Thank you very much for your answer to my question.
Really helpful!
J.
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I am doing species niche modeling of an amphibian species. I have 151 presence observations, after filttering points that were too close (< 1 km). I am using data presence from GBIF, iNaturalist, and presence data shared by colleagues. However, I am worried about sampling bias, because it is an opportunistic kind of approach. Therefore, I am trying to find a way to correct sampling bias to better our models.
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When the sample size is large, naturally the error will get minimized. Further, if you collect data on relevant foraging variables, they should be subjected to tools such as PCA/ DFA, which will result in niche segregation.
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I'd like to learn more about interesting environmental management and citizen science/stewardship studies that combine both quantitative and qualitative methods.
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While mixed methods approaches to research have been accepted practice within the social sciences for several decades (Tashakkori and Teddlie 2003), the rising demand for cross-disciplinary analyses of socio-environmental processes has necessitated a renewed examination of this approach within environmental studies. Urban environmental stewardship is one area where it is clear that neither a quantitative nor qualitative approach can provide a full understanding. Rather, the typologies and relationships identified by quantitative data are essential to structuring qualitative data collection strategies in such a way as to lead to specific knowledge of how stewardship groups affect governance systems by carrying information and resources across sectors and scales. In short, stewardship is an issue within environmental studies that demands a mixed methods approach in order to understand the social-ecological implications. This chapter demonstrates one way in which such research might be structured.
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What kind of scientific research dominate in the field of Economic and financial situation of citizens?
Please, provide your suggestions for a question, problem or research thesis in the issues: Economic and financial situation of citizens.
Please reply.
I invite you to the discussion
Thank you very much
Dear Friends and Colleagues of RG
The issues of specific programs to improve the economic, financial, material and housing situation of households as key instruments of pro-development keynesian anti-crisis state intervention and significant components of the socio-economic policy of the state I described in the publications:
I invite you to discussion and cooperation.
Best wishes
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One of the solutions, citizen participation... The theory and practice of urban governance in recent years has undergone both a collaborative and participatory turn. The strong connection between collaboration and participation has meant that citizen participation in urban governance has been conceived in a very particular way: as varying levels of partnership between state actors and citizens. This over-focus on collaboration has led to: 1) a dearth of proposals in theory and practice for citizens to engage oppositionally with institutions; 2) the miscasting of agonistic opportunities for participation as forms of collaboration; 3) an inability to recognise the irruption of agonistic practices into participatory procedures. This article attempts to expand the conception of participatory urban governance by adapting Rosanvallon’s (2008) three democratic counter-powers—prevention, oversight and judgement—to consider options for institutionalising agonistic participatory practices. It argues that these counter-governance processes would more fully realise the inclusion agenda that underpins the participatory governance project... Dean, R. J. (2018). Counter-governance: Citizen participation beyond collaboration. Politics and Governance, 6(1), 180-188.
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We are currently trying to estimate temporal trends of species (e.g. butterflies or other insects), with very different spatial coverage of cells over time (before 2012, we had many "professional" recorders, while after that more and more citizen science data came in).
Thus, data quality before 2012 is great, and after (say) 2018 it´s great again. What should be done with the data collected between 2012-2017?
What is your recommendation on how to proceed?
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In our recent paper, we applied kernel smoothing, a method from spatial point pattern analysis (SPPA), to quantify historical and recent grasshopper range shifts in Germany. The main advantage of SPPA is that it reduces potential biases attributable to differences in sampling effort across space and time and thus is a well-suited tool to analyze opportunistic distribution data. For more details, please see our attached paper: Poniatowski, D., Beckmann, C., Löffler, F., Münsch, T., Helbing, F., Samways, M.J. & T. Fartmann (2020): Relative impacts of land-use and climate change on grasshopper range shifts have changed over time. Global Ecology and Biogeography. doi: 10.1111/geb.13188
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Does any of you study the problems of shaping socio-economic policy, whose aim is to improve the economic, housing and social situation of citizens or households? The aim of this type of policy is to increase the incomes of the population, in particular the poorer middle class in the society of a given country. The increase in consumption is the result of increased consumption and savings. As a result, the demand for consumer and capital goods is growing, production and investments are growing, and consequently accelerating economic growth of the national economy is recorded. A derivative of this process is an increase in tax revenues to the state budget due to the growing tax base, i.e. growing income and expenses. In this way, the state as an economic entity can further develop an active socio-economic policy. I conduct research on this subject.
Please, answer, comments.
I invite you to the discussion.
Dear Friends and Colleagues of RG
The issues of specific programs to improve the economic, financial, material and housing situation of households as key instruments of pro-development keynesian anti-crisis state intervention and significant components of the socio-economic policy of the state I described in the publications:
I invite you to discussion and cooperation.
Best wishes
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Why are the SARS-CoV-2 Coronavirus pandemic SARS-CoV-2 not being implemented or implemented to a very limited extent in the construction sector under the anti-crisis shields launched in individual countries, which aim to quickly restore the economy after the Coronavirus pandemic?
Many economic data already support the thesis that the impact of the SARS-CoV-2 Coronavirus pandemic on the global economy is likely to be very large. Many enterprises in the tourist, hotel, catering, cosmetics services, etc. are currently losing most, almost all, or all customers because people are afraid of SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus infection (causing Covid-19) and this is also due to various restrictions moving away from home and introducing an order or recommendation to stay at home as part of preventive quarantine in many countries. As a result, many companies are already recording large declines in sales and profits, limiting employment and / or stopping their business. In connection with these negative aspects of the deepening recession, many current economic data already confirm the thesis that probably now (April 2020) in many countries an economic crisis is beginning, which may after a few months turn into a debt crisis of the state finance system. If this situation occurs in many countries, then in 2020 the global economy will most likely slow down its growth by several percent. compared to the previous year. Therefore, it is necessary to permanently improve and increase the scale of anti-crisis socio-economic policy planned, developed and implemented both at the level of individual countries as well as within coordinated international activities. In some countries, pro-development, interventionist, anti-crisis programs have already been launched to save business entities from mass bankruptcy by introducing additional temporary tax breaks or exemptions, subsidies to employees' remuneration under fiscal policy. On the other hand, as part of monetary policy, central banks reduce interest rates, launch loans for commercial banks on preferential terms, buy lost loans from commercial banks and / or implement sovereign bond buy-back programs to maintain liquidity in the commercial and public financial system of the state. However, interventionist economic policy programs involving the launch of large investment projects in the construction sector financed from the public finance system funds are used to a limited extent. Does the period of economic downturn caused by the development of the SARS-CoV-2 Coronavirus pandemic and the introduced anti-pandemic safety instruments (temporary suspension of production in many enterprises and the closure of many service plants) last too short to launch large investment projects in the construction sector, or is it lacking type of money goals in the state finance sector? After all, such development-oriented instruments would create many jobs and could be an important factor in anti-crisis economic policy. Regardless of what exactly large investment projects would relate to, whether they would be programs for the construction of housing estates or the construction of large communication infrastructure facilities for the development of car communication arteries, highways, new power plants as part of the development of renewable energy sources, renovation of railway stations, expansion of airports, facilities rainwater retention system, etc., during the implementation of each of these investments many new jobs would be created and new infrastructural durable economic goods would be created, thanks to which in the following years economic processes would be carried out more efficiently and efficiently.
In connection with the above, I am asking you the following question: Why are the SARS-CoV-2 Coronavirus pandemic SARS-CoV-2 not being implemented or implemented to a very limited extent in the construction sector under the anti-crisis shields launched in individual countries, which aim to quickly restore the economy after the Coronavirus pandemic?
Please reply,
What is your opinion on this topic?
I am asking for an answer and invite you to a discussion,
Thank you very much and best regards,
Dariusz Prokopowicz
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For a period of 24 months, i have been part of a team that have conducted a citizen science environmental project in our community. From this project we have learned valuable lessons that can help programming of environmental projects in a manner that is not only inclusive but also exciting for youth and young scientists in similar communities across Sub-Saharan Africa. While with my colleagues, we are planning to document and share our observations, we would like to get a picture of publishing options that might be available to us. If you have any information that can help us to address our concerns, please let us know.
Patrick
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Well, it depends on your interests. If you are thinking peer reviewed there are some journals that don't have page charges. And there certainly are ways to publish solid citizen science data in such outlets. But there are also other opportunities. Personally I started writing essays a few years back and some of them have data tucked in. Better than not having to pay, some papers will pay you. Here's an example with a little preliminary data that I would not otherwise have followed up on: https://northernwoodlands.org/outside_story/article/duckweed-migration
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I am a Phd Student, would like to explore malware detection system. It would be great if anyone can share Malgenome project dataset as site is not active anymore.
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I know this question is old but in case anyone in 2020 is looking for this dataset just like myself, here is a link i found: https://figshare.com/articles/Android_malware_dataset_for_machine_learning_1/5854590/1
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Hello everyone,
my research partner and I are currently conducting a qualitative study on the voluntary and intended engagement of citizens or non-scientists in science.
We are currently searching for researchers who are willing to share their experiences on engaging citizens (or non-scientists) as research partners into their scientific study (beyond sensing tasks).
We would highly appreciate if you could share any contacts or hints, specifically if you know of any citizen science projects conducted at regional or national research institutes that would fit to our description. We are deeply thankful for any help!
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Tanja Krasnikov , If it is not too late here is another example that looks at the use of Citizen scientists in the rescuing of a sample collection.
Pring, J., Wyborn, L. and Evans, N., 2019. Reviving an Old and Valuable Collection of Microscope Slides Through the Use of Citizen Science. Data Science Journal, 18(1), p.57. DOI: http://doi.org/10.5334/dsj-2019-057
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We have made a mobile app for registration of tree- and forest lines in Norway. We would like to compare our results with similar projects.
You can see the results here: www.naturiendring.no/resultater
It's in Norwegian, but those working with tree- and forest lines will easily understand the concept.
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Hi.,
The Citizen science projects are activities sponsored by a wide variety of organizations so non-scientists can meaningfully contribute to scientific research. Activities vary widely from transcribing old ship logbooks to digitize the data as part of the Old Weather project to observing and counting birds at home... Citizen science programs are evaluated in a number of forums, including in ... scale of citizen science projects can be attributed to an increase in enabling ... or schemata, offer varied framings of particular issues in line with a critical realist
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Greetings everyone and I first would like to thank you for the advise...
I am interested in the intersection of social media and science research, education, and advocacy.
-I am working on a citizen science project and wanted to see if anyone had any advise or projects/papers that they could recommend to me.
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Hi David,
My colleagues and I launched many citizen science projects in Taiwan in recent years, and we are good at using social media (most on facebook) to share our results and interact with thousands of participants. If you were interested in, questions and suggestions are very welcome.
Here is a pamphlet regarding our projects on birds.
Thank you so much!
Cheers,
Dali
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if any paper plz send me link of paper
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dear all,
find here an example of a Citizen Science approach used to study landslides (among other hazards) in a remote environment in Africa.
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Hi all,
I'm just wondering about ebird. Everyone can see this initiative has been very successful gathering together information from different people about the location of bird species. Considering that... why ebird does not include other classes?
I have seen many citizen science projects like emmamal, mammal web, liveandes, etc... that try to follow what ebird does, but I'm not sure if they will be able to have the impact that the first has, well ebird has years working this.
I know it's easier to see birds than other species, but people who work with other classes should have sightings about the species that they work with. So at least we could start gathering that information together, in only ONE project, for both increasing the impact of our research and involving citizens.
so... when ebird will include other classes? why not using same platform for gathering together information about other taxa? By the way I know "naturalist" tries to do that, but I'm not sure if they have the impact of ebird
(I hope a nice discussion will emerge from this)
cheers
nicolas
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There are many other options than eBird for a wider species range. Here in Europe Observation.org (www.observation.org) is the most popular after 15 years, with 100 millions observations and 100.000.000 users. It is international, and it is growing fastly. Its mobile apps are amazing for professional and amateur naturalists, with much more data quality than eBird.
Regards
Julio Rabadán González
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Hello everyone,
i used a bird occurrences data (obtained from ebird.org) from a region (i didn't filter it in any way) and modeled part of region with MaxEnt, the AUC was about 0.9 which i think it indicates that model performs well BUT in other parts of the region (which i didn't include occurrences of it in the model) in some places that i have occurrences the predicted probability is zero.
so my question is whether it's reliable to use only citizen science data for Ecological niche modelling?
is there any method like filtering occurrences data the make model perform better?
what is the other way you can suggest to validate my model beside field exploration?
thanks in advance.
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Citizen science data can be highly unreliable if not cleaned up via removal of biased data, with apriori data integrity checks. Though usually relatively easier and cheap to acquire for a purpose, it should be used with extra-caution, taking context in consideration.
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Should the development of industry be burdened with additional environmental taxes in order to finance the development of energy based on renewable energy sources and reclamation of a devastated natural environment?
In subsequent years, developed countries will be under pressure to increase spending on environment-friendly targets, including financing the development of power plants based on renewable energy sources, reclamation of devastated natural environment and reduction of emissions of environmentally harmful industrial waste.
On the other hand, the increase in fiscal burdens can be transformed in a short time into a decline in business investment and a decline in the country's economic growth. However, if enterprises switched their business concepts to the production of better-quality goods and characterized by a longer period of usefulness and functioning in the product and service life cycles, then it would be possible to reduce the use of resources and reduce the negative external effects of industrial development. In addition, the state from the collected additional pro-environmental taxes would provide public goods that would improve the level and living conditions of citizens, therefore there would be opportunities to better use and perhaps reduce spending on some other departments providing public goods such as public safety, administrative, health, etc. In the longer term, economic development would take place in a slightly different macroeconomic balance and with a slowdown in economic growth. However, this mentioned issue of exempting economic growth would no longer be negative.
In view of the above, I am asking you:
Should the development of industry be burdened with additional environmental taxes in order to finance the development of energy based on renewable energy sources and reclamation of a devastated natural environment?
Please reply. I invite you to the discussion
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Hi Kenneth,
1) I agree that it probably wouldn't work as it is currently set up. The UK have a carbon tax. What usually happens with taxes (in the UK) such as Sugar, road tax, tax on cigarettes, etc is that they are put into one pot and distributed how the government see fit. As I currently understand it the money generated from the sugar tax isn't directly utilised for education on excessive sugar intake or to treat diabetes. I'm thinking outside the box here but what if they took the tax and used it to acquire land and plant trees rather than take the carbon tax put it in one pot and use it to fix roads, etc.
2) If they used it to protect green areas and plant trees it would potentially go some way to reducing C02 although I understand it would be negligible but its better than nothing. It would be either prove you can reduce C02 or pay the tax that directly goes towards planting trees.
I understand that the current methods dont work. In the conclusion on the paper below: "The impact of a carbon tax on manufacturing: Evidence from microdata" it states:
"While curbing industrial emissions must be an integral part of any such policy, there is surprisingly little empirical evidence on the impacts of large-scale regulations of industrial GHG emissions".
I think in conclusion we should never write off any ideas, but we should never go into anything without carrying out comprehensive research into the economical / environmental impact and feasibility. It is very complex and as I mentioned its as complex and diverse business as the industry it affects.
Just to clarify I'm just an engineer in automotive industry, I'm not claiming to be any type of expert on this subject. I would just like to see people thinking more outside of the box and generating discussion. I think we can all do something. Personally I have been growing trees over the past three years, its my very small way of teaching my son how to do something positive as well as teaching him about nature.
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Hello, I am interested in everyone thoughts on what motivates a volunteer to participate in a survey of any form.
I am currently undertaking a literature review on citizen science and would like first hand experience reviews on why volunteers participated.
Thanks
Stephanie
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Have a look at these references.
- Rosenthal, Robert. "The volunteer subject." Human relations 18, no. 4 (1965): 389-406.
- Clary, E. Gil, Mark Snyder, and Arthur A. Stukas. "Volunteers' motivations: Findings from a national survey." Nonprofit and voluntary sector quarterly 25, no. 4 (1996): 485-505.
- Farrell, Jocelyn M., Margaret E. Johnston, and G. David Twynam. "Volunteer motivation, satisfaction, and management at an elite sporting competition." Journal of sport Management 12, no. 4 (1998): 288-300.
- Peterson, Dane K. "Benefits of participation in corporate volunteer programs: employees' perceptions." Personnel review 33, no. 6 (2004): 615-627.
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I am comparing two uneven time series of coral cover data collected by citizen scientists vs academics for validation of the former. Hoping to prove that citizen science data captures the same changes in coral cover (e.g caused by typhoon) over time as the academics.
What test should I use to show there is no significant difference in the two sets of data?
Is Granger test of causality (although I am not looking for causality) a suitable test?
Thank you!
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Fisher's f-test (test if variances are different)
t-test (test if means are different)
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Hello everyone!
I am doing my PhD in Human Geography at the University of Reading and was previously involved with citizen science at the Open University.
I am now exploring the citizen science literature and projects in the global south.
Any papers or links to projects would be very welcome!
The languages I can read are English, French, Spanish or Portuguese. Thank you very much in advance!
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Thank you very much everyone!
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I wonder if anyone knows about citizen science projects in primate research/conservation. I have reviewed the literature on the (potential) role of citizen science in primate research and conservation, but so far I have found only one project: www.chimpandsee.org. I have also learned that the Colombian Primatological Society has launched a call for volunteer contributions of primate occurrence records for a study on species distributions. However, I have not found concrete information (reports, peer-reviewed article) on that project yet. Has anyone heard of similar projects?
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Yes , here in Panama we have a citizen scientists cooperation, see fcprimatespanama.org
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I wonder if there is some useful research or literature about getting ground truth for supervised classification. I am just thinking about ground truth in scope of citizen science, effectivness and representativness and I didn't find much thorough articles out there! Do you have some recommendation where to start look? THX!
Cheers
Lukas
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Dear Lukas
I send you some references that may be useful to start:
Richards, J.A. 1999. Remote Sensing Digital Image Analysis, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, p. 240.
Jensen, J.R. (1986): Introductory Digital Image Processing. New Jersey, Prentice-Hall, 379 p.
Calculating Sample Size for Stratified Random Sample. U.S. Department of Agriculture. 2000. Forest Service Handbook, FSH 2409.12 – Timber Cruising Handbook, Washington, DC, 237 p.
Selkowitz, D. J., & Stehman, S. V. (2011). Thematic accuracy of the National
Land Cover Database (NLCD) 2001 land cover for Alaska. Remote Sensing of Environment, 115(6), 1401–1407. doi:10.1016/j.rse.2011.01.020
Di Gregorio, A. 2005. Land cover classification system: Classification concepts and user manual: LCCS. Vol. 8, Food & Agriculture Org.
Daniel Gómez, Javier Montero. 2011. Determining the accuracy in image supervised classification problems.
Gong, P.,Wang, J., Yu, L., Zhao, Y., Zhao, Y., Liang, L., Niu, Z., Huang, X., Fu, H., Liu, S., et al. (2013). Finer resolution observation and monitoring of global land cover: First mapping results with landsat tm and etm + data. International Journal of Remote Sensing, 34, 2607–2654.
REX PEACOCK. 2014. ACCURACY ASSESSMENT OF SUPERVISED AND UNSUPERVISED CLASSIFICATION USING LANDSAT IMAGERY OF LITTLE ROCK, ARKANSAS.Thesis.
Sarah Lynn Lewis-Gonzales. 2015. Accuracy of Supervised Classification of Cropland in sub–Saharan Africa. Thesis.
Zhao, Y.; Feng, D., Yua, L., Wang, X., Chen, Y., Hernández, H.J., Galleguillos, M., Estades, C., Biging, G., Radke, J. & Gong, P. 2016. Detailed dynamic land cover mapping of Chile: accuracy improvement by integrating multi-seasonal land cover data. Remote Sensing of Environment 183, 170–185.
Ramakalavathi Marapareddy, James V. Aanstoos and Nicolas H. Younan.2017.Accuracy Analysis Comparison of Supervised Classification Methods for Anomaly Detection on Levees Using SAR Imagery. Electronics 6, 83; doi:10.3390/electronics6040083.
Best regards
LM
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I'm interested in Federal and State Policies/Incentives/Regulations as well as opportunities for innovation, crowd-sourcing, and citizen science.
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Use AMs could be another option as phosphorous accumulator disallowing major chunk of phosphorous to move into water bodies..
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In 1999, at the World Conference on Science it was acknowledged that the social contract for science had been broken. That people do not consider that science breakthroughs or developments  will always mean good things for them.
National Science and Technology Systems have taken notice because this "contract breach" means that people "want more for their money". In order to protect national science budgets, people must be able to link easily science achievements to their well being and the solution of societal problems. Transdisciplinary research, translational medicine and postnormal science are some of the most known efforts to bridge the gap. And new forms of collaboration (citizen science, crowfunding, participatory research) that provide increased access to resources and knowledge have emerged.
But the problem is that the new forms of collaboration mean developing new skills and capacities- on both sides. So scientists must devote increasing portions of their time just to get funding and resources, at a time when policy changes may imply the "death" or downturn of big and small lines of research. And it takes time to learn how to engage (and train)  non scientists to collaborate with researchers (as in citizen science, crowfunding and participatory research), just when you may need it the most.
Society has developed ways to manage risk of losses, by distributing the risk among many. This form of risk management is called insurance and it helps people cover losses that they can´t afford on their own. 
 Is there a way that we scientists can collaborate with each other in order to prepare non scientists to collaborate with us to provide access to resources and funding in time of need (that, is to manage the risk of decreasing research budgets and positions)?
If there is a way, it probably involves social networks and sharing our resources (knowledge) with non scientists so that they decide to share theirs with us. 
Do you think that a Social Insurance for Scientists is possible? Why? What would it take to make it happen? Do you think it would be worth to invest in it valuable researchers´ time? Please share your views on this proposal. 
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Maria,
I can get what you are saying. The following literature may be of your interest.
L
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I'm doing a master on moose populations estimations with a citizen science approch.
I want to simulate a hunter and a moose population (of known size) in the same landscape, "make them meet", and see how the abundance estimations are biaised depending of the proportion of "cheaters" (hunters who don't say the right number of moose seen).
I explored the SELES and RAMAS/GIS softwares, but I'm not sure they are appropriate tools to simulate two animal populations movements in a static landscape.
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InsightMaker would work. It is very easy to use.
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Hello Everyone,
I will be sampling in the Arctics during this summers and will be collecting cyanobacterial mats from different habitats like retreating glaciers, small puddles, green meadows and open rock boulders.
I intend to apply both the culture dependent and independent approaches.
For the culture dependent work, can anyone suggest some methods regarding how to bring back the samples back to India and grow them and also, how to store the samples in the Arctic station during my stay. It will be around 50 days after collection that the samples will be brought back to my lab.
Some advise for the culture independent work is also welcome in context of sample storage and processing !!!!!
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 Dear Prashant, I am working now with cyanobacteria biofilms from Lake Baikal. I can suggest to keep psychrophiles in liquid mineral media with ammonium ions instead nitrates. It was the best media from my experience. I wish you the best work! 
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I'm working on the development of a citizen science volunteer water quality monitoring program in my area, and am seeking advice on preferred equipment.  Any suggestions of what has worked for your organization?
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good answer mohd
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I am looking to buy two kayaks for surveys on a local stream, and I am curious what are your pros and cons, favorite accessories, "look-out-for" advice on kayaks!
I will be getting short (preferably under 10') kayaks and flat bottomed (the stream will be too shallow to navigate by August) kayaks. When I have used a kayak to survey before I found the sit-in to have more storage capacity for field gear that I need handy (clipboard, gps, pelican case for camera, binos, water bottle, etc etc) but what are other factors that I should look out for?
Fun easy question for such a beautiful spring day :)
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For a small stream I suggest a short kayak for ease of turning around.  A kayak 8 feet and under can fit into an 8 foot truck box, at least diagonally, something to consider if you have many sites to visit which require putting in at different places along the stream.  This saves time instead of tying the kayak down on top of your vehicle.  The shorter kayak is easier to portage around beaver dams also.
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Dear all, I am wondering why design strategies in citizen culture generate changes in social behavior? And my closest reference is Antanas Mockus (Mayor of Bogotá of the 90's) with his policy on respect for norms, laws, and culture. There may be other approaches than policies.
Thanks in advance
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Thanks for sharing Jorge, I know the work of Rocío Londoño. If you have worked on the topic I would like to read the publications, they would be very useful in my research project. Thanks again and I hope to see you soon
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I'm looking for a simple methodology for rockfall hazard mapping for the hiking trail of Kinabalu National Park. 
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See: "Use of Quadcopter drones in boundary layer energy balance studies" in my project list on RG. This is a private retirement fun research project that I am progressing with. Wetlands are one of those difficult to access biomes, both from the transport perspective and from the provision of measurements that would benefit from autonomous GPS position defined surveys of extent, surface factors and boundary layer exchange that modern quadcopter drones could easily and cheaply provide, especially in developing regions of the world where knowledge of wetlands is badly needed. 
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Very difficult to participate as this is a private hobby investigation of mine. I have been retired from the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology (CEH) , Wallingford, UK for nearly 10 years and while I still have links as a Research Fellow of that organisation, I am not funded by them. If I have any success - of course I will endeavour to get CEH interested.
My recommendation to you at this stage, if you think you might have a use for quadcopter drones in a research sense, is to become familiar with autonomous drones in your country - both from a legal and operational point of view. Begin to identify where such a platform could be used and where it might be more effective and cheaper than current methods of observation. The main problem at present is to do with weight. The payload of affordable quadcopter drones is of the order of a few kgs but even at this low weight  you need to spend $3-4000. This weight limit means that we have to develop new lightweight sensor systems - something that the sensor manufacturers such as Skye and Campbell are currently looking at. However, the operational methodology of autonomous flight with quadcopters is generally the same whether you use large expensive or smaller cheaper quadcopters. Off-the-shelf examples are the DJI Phantom and the Parrot Bebop 2 which retail at about $500. It's not that difficult to make your own as I am doing and the costs then are about $250. Even simple photographic and video surveys of large relatively inaccessible areas such as wetlands, to show seasonal changes in extent and vegetation cover, are achievable with currently available equipment. 
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I am a final year Computer Science Student conducting research into people who use and people who have lost Portable Storage Devices such as USB memory sticks.
I would appreciate any help
Many Thanks
Ian
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No he's my brother, his project is USB encryption, mine is losing portable storage devices. There's 14 questions mainly multiple choice 2 minutes max.
Thanks
Ian
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We are investigating climate impacts on sugar maples (and other maple species) in the production of maple syrup. This process is very dependent on climate, requiring freezing night temperatures, and thawing day temperatures. We would like to request large volumes of data from people who are tapping the trees across its range in North America (Eastern Canada to Southern Appalachians). I'm trying to determine the best online platform where people can contribute multiple fields of data. 
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In addition to the above answers, you might see if you are able to create a project through the Zooniverse platform (https://www.zooniverse.org/), as they now have a "build your own project" feature. It is doesn't fit your needs, perhaps contact the developers,whom are located in the US and UK from my understanding. Alternatively, you could explore if local NGOs or museums would have interest in your project and helping you develop your own database that citizen scientists can contribute. An Australian example of a project collective supported by a museum is the Bowerbird project (bowerbirds famously collect things for the nesting sites, so the project name is metaphorical rather than literal: http://www.bowerbird.org.au/). It might also be worth checking SciStarter (http://scistarter.com/index.html), which is a project finder, to see if anyone else is doing a similar project you could collaborate with.
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In 2015 we will have coordinated 25 years of monitoring nocturnal owl populations, and have data on volunteer participation frequency. I would like to send a questionnaire to assess or analyze motivation of volunteers to seek correlated variables and reasons why some people participated only once, while others did so enthusiastically year after year.
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Thanks very much Steven,
I have shared these resources with my honors thesis student.
Cheers, Jim
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And if, what are their web sites?
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Experiments - I'm not sure - but in Australia both these groups are certainly well set up to detect changes... http://reeflifesurvey.com/ and http://www.redmap.org.au/
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We started a crowdfunding campaign on indigog recently and we still need some help regarding outreach. we already wrote to a lot of newspapers and radio as well as some blogs, but most of them did not get back to us. Does someone has maybe some tips or do know a journalist who might be good to approach? Check out our Ocean Sampling Day Project on indigogo!
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I'm trying indiegogo now. I research child abuse effects on the brain and feel it is intuitive for lay people. It is tough to get people in your networks to respond. 
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I'm planning to start a new biodiversity conservation project based on citizen science in Sri Lanka. I don't seem to find any local bodies providing small grants for research like this. I would much appreciate if anyone could suggest a potential opportunity to me.
Thanks.
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The best source for grant opportunity is found at the following website: Terra Viva Grants. You'll get a full list and deadlines of a bunch of them... Good luck.
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I'm currently working on a project that uses citizen science to collect a near-daily dataset on terrestrial insects along the river corridor in Grand Canyon. I would like to find a simple way for these same citizen scientists to collect data on bat activity. 
I've been using an ANABAT to record bat activity on a few river trips, but this only gives me one bat call at a time and is not quantifying the activity. I've also tried using a BATON paired with a handheld clicker with a youth group. Their interpretations of how many bat calls they heard were wildly varied. I've also tried using a bright light paired with a clicker, but by the end of the 10 minute survey there were so many bugs in my light that I was attracting significant bat activity.
Help! Cost effective and durable options are appreciated, but if you know of any fancy gizmos and programs I'd like to learn about those as well. 
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In the Netherlands we've used Batloggres of Elekon and let people place those in their backyard and then have them pass the Batlogger on (Hopping Detectors). It is a easy to use real-time recorder with free (!) identification software of good quality (Batexplorer/Batscope). It can store up to 128Gig of recording on a sd card. The identification software is easy to use, also for less experienced batworkers. And you can quickly identify 95% of the recordings as Pip pip so you can concentrate on the remainder for diversity (rare species) and use the 95% for activity...
Compared to EM3 the microfones on the Batloggers are senitive and picked up more calls in general and more  calls of the low frequency group. That migth ofcourse change in the future.
As a relatieve measure of activity (and certainly not # animals) we used #passages (a passage is one recording, one recording can hold several calls). 
We started to use the same divice for several other citizen science projects. People find it very easy to use and the recordings are good and results are surprising (rare species picked up in locations we didnt expect them).
Well worth a try in my opinion!
Hope this helps.
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Scan the questions sections for #OpenScience, #Science20, #OpenAccess and you will notice that the vast majority by far, are spending significant Q&A on what is wrong with Open Science, what does not work, and what could (or has) horribly gone wrong. Makes you wonder how high the h-index on those questions gets, and how representative that is of reality.
Although exposing fraud, plagiarism, bad publisher service, and poor quality is essential to prevent other falling victim, it is hardly as inspiring or motivating. Actually, it can give the wrong impression to the novice, and be dangerous.
So, let's balance the discussion and focus on the what works, by apply the scientific method to gauge the positive side of #OpenScience (if any). There are many shining examples of how #OpenScience can boost your career profile, on the way to that tenure.
OS practioners, we know you are out there, so don't be shy and tell us how you integrate OS in your daily workflow, and in what measurable ways does #OpenScience contribute to your profile and impact?
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I agree. We need easier ways to help researchers to share data and publications and to  get credit for their work. Impactstory could be helpful in this respect.
'Impactstory is an open-source, web-based tool that helps researchers explore and share the diverse impacts of all their research products—from traditional ones like journal articles, to emerging products like blog posts, datasets, and software. By helping researchers tell data-driven stories about their impacts, we're helping to build a new scholarly reward system that values and encourages web-native scholarship.'
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I need to focus on clearly defined and measurable dimensions of citizen expectations on public services, in order to develop a questionnaire or an interview scheme
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Hi,
you can consult this article: Gregg G. Van Ryzin (2013): An Experimental Test of the Expectancy-Disconfirmation Theory of Citizen Satisfaction. Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, Vol. 32, No. 3, 597–614 (2013)
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I would like to know the latest IT techniques or research questions (business models, Technologies to resolve..) in the domain of crowdsourcing and citizen science
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I agree that data quality is a major problem in citizen science and crowdsourcing. Our group at Memorial University of Newfoundland has been working on this problem for the past few years. We argue that in addition to expertise data quality is rooted in the way we model citizen science applications (e.g., in the way we do database design).
Please feel free to refer to some of the arguments about participation-data quality trade-off, and data quality as a function of conceptual modeling:
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I am looking for reference paper regarding the implementation of citizen science projects in formal education
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Thanks a lot!
We are actually just working on a green paper regarding citizen science, where policy recommendations should be given to the EU in order to support citizen science. Citizen science in schools is one of the aspects we want to address there.
If you want to contribute, there is still an open call: http://www.socientize.eu/?q=eu/content/call-contributors-citizen-science-green-paper
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I think that citizen science projects are some of the best means used in increasing people's engagement in and enthusiasm about science. I am interested in hearing from researchers / scientists who have done work in citizen science where the public were engaged in real scientific research and data collection. I would like to learn about your different experiences; how did you start the project? How do you reach for the public?
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Hi!
In my research field, Astronomy, the Galaxy Zoo project (http://data.galaxyzoo.org/) has been a huge successful citizen science project. The project consisted in the visual classification of hundreds of thousands of galaxies and around 100000 people contributed to the classifications. The outcome of these work have been several research papers and I even profited from this huge work in one of my papers.
I've seen that right now there is a Galaxy Zoo 2 project together with several similar projects in the Zoouniverse website (https://www.zooniverse.org/) with more than 800000 people registered.
I think that in the Zoouniverse website you can find ideas that can help you.
Cheers!
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(by crowdsourcing I mean the outsourcing of tasks to non-peer groups, including members of the public)
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You might be interested in the dissertation of Seth Cooper who won the ACM Dissertation Award this year. The title is "A Framework for Scientific Discovery through Video Games," and he "used" computer gamers to solve some hard problems in bio-chemistry by representing research problems as puzzles.
There is a pdf at http://gradworks.umi.com/35/01/3501867.html (but its quality is quite low).