3 min read•june 18, 2024
Minna Chow
Minna Chow
The rise of the internet has led to a rise in the amount of data and human capital available to researchers.
This free flow of data and information makes identifying and solving problems easier, and more people have access to the solution once it's found.
Citizen science is scientific research that the general population helps to conduct. Ordinary citizens, often non-scientists, help contribute data to research projects using computing devices.
Here are some examples of citizen science in action!
Name | Description | URL |
Christmas Birds | Every winter, the Audubon Bird Society hosts the Christmas Bird Count, where volunteers go out and count birds. The data is then used to help measure the health of bird populations. | https://www.audubon.org/conservation/science/christmas-bird-count |
eBird | eBird is an online database of bird information that birdwatchers help to collect. It is among one of the world's largest "biodiversity-related science projects," with more than 100 million bird sightings contributed per year. | https://ebird.org/home |
Zooniverse | The largest platform for citizen science, Zooniverse hosts over 50 projects in a wide range of fields, from the arts to astronomy. | https://www.zooniverse.org/ |
Nasa | Nasa hosts several citizen science projects, from tracking penguin colonies to studying giant kelp forests. | https://science.nasa.gov/citizenscience |
National Geographic | National Geographic also lists a wide range of citizen science projects, mainly in the fields of biology and earth science. | https://www.nationalgeographic.org/topics/citizen-science/?q=&page=1&per_page=25 |
Crowdsourcing is the practice of getting a large amount of input or information from people on the Internet. Citizen science is an example of crowdsourcing, but crowdsourcing can also take other forms.
Just like citizen science, crowdsourcing gives a wide range of people the ability to contribute to organizations in general, not just scientific endeavors. The organizations also get more diverse data to work with and can do more than gather information by hand. (Spot a pattern?) Another advantage of crowdsourcing (for organizations, anyways) is that when organizations crowdsource they often don't need to pay for the information or the labor it takes to input it.
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3 min read•june 18, 2024
Minna Chow
Minna Chow
The rise of the internet has led to a rise in the amount of data and human capital available to researchers.
This free flow of data and information makes identifying and solving problems easier, and more people have access to the solution once it's found.
Citizen science is scientific research that the general population helps to conduct. Ordinary citizens, often non-scientists, help contribute data to research projects using computing devices.
Here are some examples of citizen science in action!
Name | Description | URL |
Christmas Birds | Every winter, the Audubon Bird Society hosts the Christmas Bird Count, where volunteers go out and count birds. The data is then used to help measure the health of bird populations. | https://www.audubon.org/conservation/science/christmas-bird-count |
eBird | eBird is an online database of bird information that birdwatchers help to collect. It is among one of the world's largest "biodiversity-related science projects," with more than 100 million bird sightings contributed per year. | https://ebird.org/home |
Zooniverse | The largest platform for citizen science, Zooniverse hosts over 50 projects in a wide range of fields, from the arts to astronomy. | https://www.zooniverse.org/ |
Nasa | Nasa hosts several citizen science projects, from tracking penguin colonies to studying giant kelp forests. | https://science.nasa.gov/citizenscience |
National Geographic | National Geographic also lists a wide range of citizen science projects, mainly in the fields of biology and earth science. | https://www.nationalgeographic.org/topics/citizen-science/?q=&page=1&per_page=25 |
Crowdsourcing is the practice of getting a large amount of input or information from people on the Internet. Citizen science is an example of crowdsourcing, but crowdsourcing can also take other forms.
Just like citizen science, crowdsourcing gives a wide range of people the ability to contribute to organizations in general, not just scientific endeavors. The organizations also get more diverse data to work with and can do more than gather information by hand. (Spot a pattern?) Another advantage of crowdsourcing (for organizations, anyways) is that when organizations crowdsource they often don't need to pay for the information or the labor it takes to input it.
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