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Lights, Camera…Citizen Science: Assessing the Effectiveness of Smartphone-Based Video Training in Invasive Plant Identification
Author(s) -
Jared Starr,
Charles M. Schweik,
Nathan Bush,
Lena Fletcher,
J. Paul Finn,
Jennifer N. Fish,
Charles T. Bargeron
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0111433
Subject(s) - citizen science , popularity , identification (biology) , context (archaeology) , computer science , variety (cybernetics) , data science , training (meteorology) , multimedia , data collection , field (mathematics) , crowdsourcing , world wide web , artificial intelligence , psychology , social psychology , paleontology , statistics , botany , physics , mathematics , meteorology , pure mathematics , biology
The rapid growth and increasing popularity of smartphone technology is putting sophisticated data-collection tools in the hands of more and more citizens. This has exciting implications for the expanding field of citizen science. With smartphone-based applications (apps), it is now increasingly practical to remotely acquire high quality citizen-submitted data at a fraction of the cost of a traditional study. Yet, one impediment to citizen science projects is the question of how to train participants. The traditional “in-person” training model, while effective, can be cost prohibitive as the spatial scale of a project increases. To explore possible solutions, we analyze three training models: 1) in-person, 2) app-based video, and 3) app-based text/images in the context of invasive plant identification in Massachusetts. Encouragingly, we find that participants who received video training were as successful at invasive plant identification as those trained in-person, while those receiving just text/images were less successful. This finding has implications for a variety of citizen science projects that need alternative methods to effectively train participants when in-person training is impractical.

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