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Crowds, citizens, and science: a multi-dimensional framework and agenda for future research

Chiara Franzoni, Marion Poetz, Henry Sauermann

2021Industry and Innovation41 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Research projects that actively involve ‘crowds’ or non-professional ‘citizen scientists’ are attracting growing attention. Such projects promise to increase scientific productivity while also connecting science with the general public. We make three contributions. First, we argue that the largely separate literatures on ‘Crowd Science’ and ‘Citizen Science’ investigate strongly overlapping sets of projects but take different disciplinary lenses. Closer integration can enrich research on Crowd and Citizen Science (CS). Second, we propose a framework to profile projects with respect to four types of crowd contributions: activities, knowledge, resources, and decisions. This framework also accommodates machines and algorithms, which increasingly complement or replace professional and non-professional researchers as a third actor. Finally, we outline a research agenda anchored on important underlying organisational challenges of CS projects. This agenda can advance our understanding of Crowd and Citizen Science, yield practical recommendations for project design, and contribute to the broader organisational literature.

Topics & Concepts

CrowdsCitizen sciencePolitical scienceRegional scienceData sciencePublic relationsSociologyMedia studiesComputer scienceComputer securityBotanyBiologyOpen Source Software InnovationsMobile Crowdsensing and CrowdsourcingInnovative Human-Technology Interaction
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