by bystander » Sun Jul 15, 2012 12:32 am
Join the Citizen Science Brigade
Discover Blogs | Bad Astronomy | 2012 July 13
A lot of people think only scientists can do science.
They’re right. But then, anyone who does science is a scientist. You can do science. So, you wanna be a scientist?
For a while now, more and more regular ol’ people have been participating in science. It started a few years back with
SETI@Home, where you could download software to automatically process data taken from radio telescopes using your CPU. Still, as advanced as computers are, there are still things that are just better done with human brains (what we call "
wetware"). Pattern recognition. Pulling weak data out of strong noise. Seeing the anomaly in the field of sameness.
Citizen Science, it’s called. It’s a powerful new tool,
crowdsourcing the work to people interested in helping out. And the cool thing is:
it works. People
categorize galaxies. They
examine lunar craters. They
look for lonely iceballs orbiting the Sun out past Neptune.
The only problem has been finding these projects… but that’s not a problem any more.
SciStarter is your
one-stop shopping for citizen science. Founded by my pal Darlene Cavalier (from
Science Cheerleader), SciStarter has tons of projects with which you can participate. And not just astronomy and space science; there’s biology, archaeology, chemistry, health, climate…. the list is impressive.
Even better,
Discover Magazine has partnered with SciStarter to create Your Research Mission, a weekly highlighted project in Citizen Science. It’s a great place to start if you’re looking to participate and make a real difference for science research. Of course, if you read my blog (and you do) then Astronomy and Space may be of particular interest to you. So why not
check out what they’ve got there?
[url=http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/2012/07/13/join-the-citizen-science-brigade/][size=120][b][i]Join the Citizen Science Brigade[/i][/b][/size][/url]
Discover Blogs | Bad Astronomy | 2012 July 13
[quote]A lot of people think only scientists can do science.
They’re right. But then, anyone who does science is a scientist. You can do science. So, you wanna be a scientist?
For a while now, more and more regular ol’ people have been participating in science. It started a few years back with [url=http://setiathome.berkeley.edu/][b]SETI@Home[/b][/url], where you could download software to automatically process data taken from radio telescopes using your CPU. Still, as advanced as computers are, there are still things that are just better done with human brains (what we call "[url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wetware_%28brain%29][b]wetware[/b][/url]"). Pattern recognition. Pulling weak data out of strong noise. Seeing the anomaly in the field of sameness.
[float=right][url=http://www.scistarter.com/][img]http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/files/2012/03/scistarter_logo.jpg[/img][/url][hr][/hr][/float]Citizen Science, it’s called. It’s a powerful new tool, [url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crowdsourcing][b]crowdsourcing[/b][/url] the work to people interested in helping out. And the cool thing is: [b][i]it works[/i][/b]. People [url=http://www.galaxyzoo.org/][b]categorize galaxies[/b][/url]. They [url=http://cosmoquest.org/mappers/moon/][b]examine lunar craters[/b][/url]. They [url=http://cosmoquest.org/iceinvestigators/][b]look for lonely iceballs[/b][/url] orbiting the Sun out past Neptune.
The only problem has been finding these projects… but that’s not a problem any more. [url=http://www.scistarter.com/][b]SciStarter[/b][/url] is your [b][i]one-stop shopping for citizen science[/i][/b]. Founded by my pal Darlene Cavalier (from [url=http://www.sciencecheerleader.com/][b]Science Cheerleader[/b][/url]), SciStarter has tons of projects with which you can participate. And not just astronomy and space science; there’s biology, archaeology, chemistry, health, climate…. the list is impressive.
Even better, [url=http://scistarter.com/partners.html][b][i]Discover Magazine[/i] has partnered with SciStarter[/b][/url] to create Your Research Mission, a weekly highlighted project in Citizen Science. It’s a great place to start if you’re looking to participate and make a real difference for science research. Of course, if you read my blog (and you do) then Astronomy and Space may be of particular interest to you. So why not [url=http://www.scistarter.com/topic/16-Astronomy%20%26%20Space][b]check out what they’ve got there[/b][/url]? [/quote]