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www.iiasa.ac.at winter 2017/18 â—Ľ options 15
the project, the researchers are working with nongovernmental
organizations (NGOs) and community groups in the lower Karnali
Basin of Nepal.
The remote communities already had hand-drawn paper maps
on flood hazard, vulnerability, and capacities, facilitated by NGOs,
but there was nothing online—when Liu first visited the region in
2014, he didn’t have any spatial data and couldn’t even find focal
communities on online maps. Working with IIASA, Practical Action,
the Center for Social Development and Research, and Kathmandu
Living Labs (a leading civic tech group in Nepal and South Asia) Liu
and colleagues have engaged volunteer citizen mappers and a wide
range of stakeholders to map critical flood risk information both
online and offline. These maps include geographical information
such as rivers, roads, cropland, and forests, as well as features such as
housing types, shelters, water pumps, and other spatial information
on critical resources for disaster risk management planning. These
data are owned and managed by local NGOs and for the first time
basin-level flood risk and capacity maps are now available for the area.
Other Geo-Wiki projects have reached out to farmers, for example
in Brazil and Africa, with mobile apps that allow them to upload
data on crops and diseases, and receive alerts related to weather
events or disease threats.
“We call it participatory citizen science, or even extreme citizen
science. It’s not just contributing data, but really co-producing science
with people in a community,” says Liu. He points out that the idea
of knowledge co-production is not new—researchers in the IIASA
Risk and Resilience Program have worked with communities and
stakeholders for decades on participatory research that engages
stakeholders with many different viewpoints and experiences. Seen
from that lens, apps and games in the new citizen science landscape
are just one aspect of a broader movement towards the co-creation
of science.
Citizen science for global sustainability monitoring
While questions remain about the quality of crowdsourced data,
initial research at IIASA has suggested that citizens can in many cases
provide the same quality as experts. The team has experimented with different ways to improve data quality, for example by having
multiple people check each point, or by putting greater weight
on data from volunteers who have proven to be more reliable. In
addition, they have found that people can be trained, and that
feedback and engagement help improve quality.
“What we are learning is that feedback is key. The more directly
citizens are involved in your campaign, the more they understand
the campaign and how the data will be used, and the more
frequently you check the quality and provide feedback, the better
the contributions will be,” Moorthy says.
As mobile phones have become ubiquitous even in the poorest
areas of the world, the potential for citizens in every part of the planet
to engage in citizen science activities is huge, filling data gaps in many
fields. Fritz and colleagues also see citizen science as a powerful tool
to monitor the 230 indicators that have been identified to track the
implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals.
See says, “Citizens can monitor change in a way that scientists
and governments just can’t. If you make a map every six years, you
will see change, but if you want to monitor the change as it happens,
you need far more data than that.” KL
Steffen Fritz
testing out the
new FotoQuest
Go app
This global field size
map is the result of
a recent Geo-Wiki
campaign. Field size is
important information
for researchers trying to
project food production
and food security.
no images
very large
large
medium
small
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no fields Further info
§ www.geo-wiki.org
§ blog.iiasa.ac.at/citizen-science
Steffen Fritz fritz@iiasa.ac.at
Linda See see@iiasa.ac.at
Inian Moorthy moorthy@iiasa.ac.at
Wei Liu liuw@iiasa.ac.at
zurĂĽck zum
Buch options, Band winter 2017/2018"
options
Band winter 2017/2018
- Titel
- options
- Band
- winter 2017/2018
- Ort
- Laxenburg
- Datum
- 2017
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 32
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine