VOSS: Crowdsourcing interaction design for citizen science virtual organizations

September 15th, 2012 - August 31st, 2015 | PROJECT

The objective of this project is to extend the concept of crowdsourcing in citizen science to the interaction design of the organization as well as to data collection. Distributed technologies offer new opportunities for conducting scientific research on a larger scale than ever before by enabling distributed collaboration. Virtual organizations that use distributed technologies in scientific organizations have primarily focused on how dedicated, professional scientists collaborate and communicate. More recently a rapidly increasing number of citizen science virtual organizations are being formed. Citizen scientists participate in scientific endeavors and typically lack formal credentials, do not hold professional positions in scientific institutions, and bring diversity of knowledge and expertise to projects and challenges. They participate in scientific endeavors related to their personal scientific interests and create new challenges for the design of virtual organizations. In terms of intellectual merit, the project will make three specific contributions: a new interaction design for collecting biodiversity data within a nature park, a model for crowdsourcing the design of an social computing approach to citizen science, and an analysis of the impact of crowdsourcing the design on motivating participation in collecting biodiversity data. Interactive tabletop computers will be placed in two nature parks so that the design of the citizen science environment can be embedded in a park experience and engage the public in understanding more about their parks, in data collection, and develop a personal commitment to environmental sustainability issues. In terms of broader impacts, the project provides three types of impact: research training by including graduate students, broad public dissemination to enhance scientific understanding of biodiversity, and benefits to society through association with the Aspen Center for Environmental Studies (ACES) and Encyclopedia of Life (EOL).

Project Website(s)

(no project website provided)

Project Products

NatureNet App
http://www.nature-net.org/#/

Team Members

Mary Lou Maher, Principal Investigator, University of North Carolina, Charlotte
Tom Yeh, Co-Principal Investigator
Jennifer Preece, Co-Principal Investigator

Funders

Funding Source: NSF
Award Number: 1221513
Funding Amount: 399872

Tags

Audience: General Public | Museum | ISE Professionals | Scientists
Discipline: Computing and information science | Life science | Social science and psychology | Technology
Resource Type: Project Descriptions
Environment Type: Exhibitions | Media and Technology | Parks | Outdoor | Garden Exhibits | Websites | Mobile Apps | Online Media