Skip to content

Setting up crowd science projects

Author: Scheliga, K., Friesike, S., Puschmann, C., & Fecher, B.
Published in: Public Understanding of Science, 1-20
Year: 2016
Type: Academic articles

Crowd science is scientific research that is conducted with the participation of volunteers who are not professional scientists. Thanks to the Internet and online platforms, project initiators can draw on a potentially large number of volunteers. This crowd can be involved to support data-rich or labour-intensive projects that would otherwise be unfeasible. So far, research on crowd science has mainly focused on analysing individual crowd science projects. In our research, we focus on the perspective of project initiators and explore how crowd science projects are set up. Based on multiple case study research, we discuss the objectives of crowd science projects and the strategies of their initiators for accessing volunteers. We also categorise the tasks allocated to volunteers and reflect on the issue of quality assurance as well as feedback mechanisms. With this article, we contribute to a better understanding of how crowd science projects are set up and how volunteers can contribute to science. We suggest that our findings are of practical relevance for initiators of crowd science projects, for science communication as well as for informed science policy making.

Visit publication

Publication

Connected HIIG researchers

Cornelius Puschmann, Dr.

Associated Researcher: The evolving digital society

Kaja Scheliga

Former Associated Researcher: Learning, knowledge, innovation

Sascha Friesike, Prof. Dr.

Associated Researcher: Knowledge & Society

Benedikt Fecher, Dr.

Associate Researcher & Former Head of Research Programme: Knowledge & Society


  • Peer Reviewed

Explore current HIIG Activities

Research issues in focus

HIIG is currently working on exciting topics. Learn more about our interdisciplinary pioneering work in public discourse.