Periodic Reporting for period 2 - REINFORCE (REsearch INfrastructures FOR Citizens in Europe)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2021-03-01 do 2022-11-30
REINFORCE has aimed to draw on the support of citizens to help in the development of new scientific knowledge. It has done this by building and extensively interacting with communities of practice that have been built around four demonstrator projects that have been designed, developed and deployed within the project on the Zooniverse platform. Citizens have assisted directly in scientific research by classifying data subjects, but they have also contributed through interactions with the demonstrator-project research teams. This communication has been fruitful enough to occasionally even merit escalating suggestions to discussions with wider networks in the supporting scientific-research collaborations.
A Policy Roadmap on research infrastructures for citizens science in Europe has been produced within the project and provides a series of recommendations and objectives to pursue in order to effectively embed citizen science in large research infrastructures. The deliverable details implementation steps on the path to effective take-up, incorporating responsible research and innovation at the heart of the process. A broad range of recommendations, covering a number of different areas, including: open access to services; standards; collaboration; inclusion; science and society; sustainability; governance models; scaling-up; and policy-making processes.
Exploring the potential of frontier citizen science for inclusion and diversity was at the very heart of the project and much work has been done to this end. A work package - Increasing the senses, increasing inclusion - was dedicated to the exploitation of this work. A dedicated data-sonification tool - sonoUno - was developed along with associated training courses. Within this work package, art and science initiatives were implemented, as well as a course on critical thinking and a senior citizen science course. The demonstrator-project documentation has also been translated into Italian, Greek and Spanish, with the aim of assisting the further exploitation of the projects long into the future and helping to diversify their communities of practice even further.
The immediate focus on the research areas, via the demonstrator projects, has been consolidated by a varied and inclusive approach to community building. Data made available for the demonstrator projects by the research collaborations supporting them have been sonified and a dedicated sonification tool - sonoUno - has been developed within the project. Training courses to support the sonification tool have been designed and implemented, while a range of art and science initiatives have been held with the aim of reaching members of the public who might otherwise not be reached through traditional methods of scientific outreach or communication. A senior citizen science course has been designed an implemented and has developed a lifespan that will go on beyond the REINFORCE project itself, while a course on critical thinking has also been developed and implemented.
The Covid-19 pandemic, which struck just a month after the project launch, inevitably created challenges along the way, but the REINFORCE Collaboration strived as much as possible to meet these head on. The project concluded with the delivery of a policy roadmap detailing policy gaps and challenges, as well as suggestions and recommendations, in relation to the subject of how to embed citizen science in LRI in a structured manner.
The close collaboration between the research teams, supported by the engagement strategy and evaluation process, has also contributed directly to the success of the individual demonstrator projects and the success of the project as a whole, while extensive engagement with teachers groups and specific efforts to promote the project to young people, have also been beneficial overall. These sessions have not just focused on the demonstrator projects, but have also involved exploring and training on the sonoUno sonification tool. The work on the sonification tool in particular has helped create a positive-feedback loop between volunteers and the development team, contributing to innovative and resourceful solutions.
The evaluation process within REINFORCE has also shown how the members of the communities of practice are confident that the demonstrator projects have been successful in achieving their goals, while impact has been measured against a wide range of indicators, including: attitudes towards science, motivation, science-related skills, self-efficacy and scientific knowledge. Differences in terms of engagement level, visual impairment and discriminated against groups have also been examined.