- Society for Amateur Scientists: For fifteen years the society has worked to support citizen science through their monthly newsletter, annual meetings, and now the iDoScience web site. So if you're interested in working with like-minded individuals from across the world, check out the site and sign up for the service. It costs a little bit of money to join, but you should find the many benefits worth it.
- Science for Citizens: This useful site helps citizen scientists find projects they may be interested in, and lets researchers engage with the public on their research. So if you are looking for new projects in the next two weeks drop by and see what they have to offer. This is also part of the ScienceCheerleader network promoting science to the public, so check out there other sites too.
Projects and opinions from the world of Citizen Science. Because getting started is easy.

Saturday, July 9, 2011
My Vacation Gift to You
Thanks to all of you who have been following my blog for the past few months and supporting the various projects I've highlighted. It's been great fun seeing what's out there and getting to test-run all these wonderful projects. However, for the next two weeks I'll be taking a break...the wife and I are taking two week off to enjoy the beautiful Utah desert. But while I'm enjoying the clear Utah skies I also have a few treats for you.
Saturday, June 18, 2011
The Government Challenges YOU!
It's important to note that not all of these challenges or scientific or technological. Viewed postitively this broadened field provides more variety and let's citizen scientists use their gifts not just for discovery, but artistry and humaintatianism. Here are a few current examples of the types of project available, with many more coming on line in the near future.
- Public Service Announcements: Film a video or create an advertisement promoting a national asset (like a US park), educating the public on an important topic, or encouraging positive behaviors.
- Photography: Display the beauty of our country in photographs, or use photographs for scientific or historical purposes.
- Automation and Programming: Design software or develop a system to perform tasks much more effectively than currently done. For example, counting the craters on a planet or identifying people in video footage.
- App Development: Design computer applications that help the public better interact with the government. For example, tracking tax refunds online.
- Children's Educational Projects: Create educational tools or projects that help kids learn, such as sample science fair projects.
- Product Design: Design commemorative coins, medals, or badges in a variety of fields.
- Slogans: Create slogans or songs promoting various government programs.
These are just a few of the many challenge types available to you. So click on over and search for an area you're interested in. Let your mind roam and your creative juices flow to win some federal challenge money. After all, they were your tax dollars!
Thursday, June 16, 2011
Challenges of the Century from NASA
Earlier this week we talked about the Ansari X Prize Foundation and the success they've had driving innovation with incentive competitions. Prizes challenged Lindbergh to cross the Atlantic, inspired SpaceShip One to send the first humans into space on a privately-funded vehicle, and continues to inspire innovative moon landers and oil cleanups. The U.S. government and NASA have also seen these successes and are hoping to use similar incentives for additional aerospace advances. So today let's look at NASA's Centennial Challenges program.
NASA has been running their flagship Challenge program since 2005. Previous contests developed new spacesuit glove designs and extracted oxygen from artificial moon rocks. Since those successes the program has expanded to new frontiers, often upping the ante by increasing the difficulty (and prize money) after each year's competition. So the winning design for one year must be constantly improved to stay competitive and keep moving the technology forward.
Below are some of the current and future competitions NASA is holding for their Centennial Challenge program. There are actually many other (smaller) competitions NASA runs that are also open to the public and accessible to citizen scientists, but I wanted to start with the big boys first. The rest we'll cover in a future post about Challenge.gov, the US government's central web site for competitions from many different agencies. So let's get down to it!
NASA has been running their flagship Challenge program since 2005. Previous contests developed new spacesuit glove designs and extracted oxygen from artificial moon rocks. Since those successes the program has expanded to new frontiers, often upping the ante by increasing the difficulty (and prize money) after each year's competition. So the winning design for one year must be constantly improved to stay competitive and keep moving the technology forward.
Below are some of the current and future competitions NASA is holding for their Centennial Challenge program. There are actually many other (smaller) competitions NASA runs that are also open to the public and accessible to citizen scientists, but I wanted to start with the big boys first. The rest we'll cover in a future post about Challenge.gov, the US government's central web site for competitions from many different agencies. So let's get down to it!
- Green Flight: Next month (July 10-17, 2011), nine teams will compete for a $1.65 million prize purse for the most fuel efficient plane that can fly over 200 miles in less than two hours while using less than one gallon of gas per occupant. Watch here for updates on how they do and who wins the big prize.
- Stronger Tether: This ongoing challenge has watched teams compete four times since 2007 with none claiming the prize for the strongest woven carbon nano-tube tether. But hope springs eternal and competition is set yet again for the Space Elevator Games on August 13, 2011.
- Power Beaming: This challenge has been successfully completed when last year a team won $900,000 for designing a machine to climb one kilometer up a tether powered only by beamed laser light. But this success just raised the bar for the next ambitious step, a "power beaming to lunar rover" competition being designed for next year.
- Sample Return Robot: A $1.5 million competition is being designed for building a robotic retriever that can find pre-hidden "rocks" in a simulated moon landscape and successfully return them to a central point. Final rules have not yet been published and a competition date has not been set, but stay tuned as this project should be finalized soon.
- Nano-Satellite Launch: A $2 million competition for a privately-funded team to launch a 1 kilogram mass (measuring 10cm x 10cm x 11cm) into orbit and have it circle the Earth at least once. Planning is still in the early stages for this project but keep watching this space as the rules become clearer.
- Night Rover: A $1.5 million competition for building a robotic rover that can collect energy during from the sun during the day, store the energy, and compete for longest night-time driving with that stored energy. Planning is also in the early stages for this competition but more details are expected in the near future.
Saturday, June 11, 2011
Spurring Massive Technology Change with the Ansari X Prize
I can't believe it's taken me two years to finally start posting about the Ansari X Prize and its contributions to citizen science. Not because they haven't made fantastic contributions to the field or haven't been incredibly successful in pushing technology innovation (which they've done in spades). Nor because the big prizes often require large investments beyond the reach of individuals at home (many are smaller or require the input of individual citizen scientists). These are important projects that amateur scientists are involved in and enjoy watching. So it's time to remedy the situation and start following them now.
The Ansari X Prize was modeled on past technology challenges like the early 20th Century Orteig Prize that spawned Charles Lindbergh's famed Atlantic Crossing and spurred a fledgling aviation industry to rapid innovation. Today the X Prize Foundation sponsors large incentive prizes ($10 million for the flagship Ansari X Prizes and smaller X Challenges) to encourage private investment and overcome key technology obstacles that will spur entire new industries.
The foundation has already been successful with the first X Prize for private human spaceflight when Spaceship One launched a man into space twice within three days, and helped create the booming private spaceflight and space tourism industries. They also succeeded with the Progressive Insurance Automotive X Prize that awarded $10 million to the best cars with 100 mile per gallon fuel economy and helped spur innovation in important energy efficiency technologies. And now they have their sights set on three more innovative challenges:
Wendy Schmidt Oil Cleanup X Challenge:
This is a one-year competition to develop breakthrough oil-spill cleanup technology that can respond to future environmental disasters such as last year's BP Deepwater Horizon spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Scheduled to end in Fall 2011, teams will compete for $1.4 million in prizes by cleaning up a simulated spill at the OHMSETT National Oil Spill Response Research and Renewable Energy Test Facility in New Jersey.
Google Lunar X Prize:
This is an ongoing competition for $30 million to the first privately-funded team that sends a robot lander to the moon, travels 500 foot along it's surface, and transmits video and still images back to earth. NASA is also assisting this project by purchasing up to $10 million in design information and data from competing teams that will be useful to the government agencies own spaceflight initiatives. Due to the significant size and scope of this project, 29 teams were registered for the current phase of the project and are quickly moving toward their planned moon launches.
Archon Genomics X Prize:
This ongoing competition looks to rapidly decrease the cost of sequencing entire human genomes; helping to uncover new medical discoveries and usher in an age of personalized disease treatments based on an individual's own genetic makeup. To do this teams must be able to sequence the entire genome of 100 individuals in 10 days, at a cost of less than $10,000 per genome. The $10 million dollar prize will provide at $7 million to the winner if three teams are successful, $7.5 million if two teams are successful, and the full amount if there is only one winner.
There are also a number of other competitions on the horizon that you may be interested in and that we will also be following. The first is the Qualcomm Tri-Corder X Prize providing $10 million for a mobile device that can diagnose human illness better than a panel of board-certified physicians. Although the goal has been set the competition rules are still being sorted out, and the project not yet begun (expected early 2012) . The Foundation also continues to develop new ideas and has recently completed a Vision summit to brainstorm additional X Prizes. The final candidates are listed on the Prize Development website and are available for voting by us, the public.
These are exciting times we live in and the X Prize Foundation is helping to keep it that way. So stick around as we follow these competitions and the private individuals competing in them. We wish them all the best of luck.
Sunday, June 5, 2011
Cataloging the Herbaria of Europe
At OpenScientist we often think of Citizen Science as a recent phenomenon. The web-based nature of many projects reinforces this notion...after all, it helps bring many people together and supports the "crowdsourcing" necessary for many projects to succeed. But much of today's knowledge comes from previous generations of amateurs and collectors investigating the world on their own. Their legacy exists not just in their discoveries, but in the collections themselves that live on and still have secrets to tell.
A prime example of this can be found in the Herbarium Collections scattered in museums across England. The island has a wonderful tradition of citizen science dating back hundreds of years, with many wealthy gentlemen collecting botanical specimens for their private use. All were tagged, sorted, and kept secure in collections that have passed down from generation to generation. The information and samples are still available, but the cataloging is not. So we need to help transfer these collections to the digital age where scientists can take further advantage of this historical treasure trove. And that's where the Herbaria United team and the Herbaria@Home project come in.
This is a Transcription-type citizen science project for entering collector, collection date, and geographic data for the botanical samples scanned by the participating museums. You don't need to identify the plants...this first step has already been done by the project staff. But it's all the other data needed to fill out our knowledge about each piece. Making the project even simpler is the series of drop-down options for each of the data fields. So even if you have trouble reading the Victorian-era handwriting, you just need to get close and find the closest from those already entered by other users. All this means that...
Getting Started is Easy:
But nothing can happen until this data has been digitized. So help both past and future citizen scientists by signing up. You'll be glad you did.
A prime example of this can be found in the Herbarium Collections scattered in museums across England. The island has a wonderful tradition of citizen science dating back hundreds of years, with many wealthy gentlemen collecting botanical specimens for their private use. All were tagged, sorted, and kept secure in collections that have passed down from generation to generation. The information and samples are still available, but the cataloging is not. So we need to help transfer these collections to the digital age where scientists can take further advantage of this historical treasure trove. And that's where the Herbaria United team and the Herbaria@Home project come in.
This is a Transcription-type citizen science project for entering collector, collection date, and geographic data for the botanical samples scanned by the participating museums. You don't need to identify the plants...this first step has already been done by the project staff. But it's all the other data needed to fill out our knowledge about each piece. Making the project even simpler is the series of drop-down options for each of the data fields. So even if you have trouble reading the Victorian-era handwriting, you just need to get close and find the closest from those already entered by other users. All this means that...
Getting Started is Easy:
- Read all about the project on the Herbaria@Home web page and click on Herbaria@Home: Register.
- Watch the Introductory Videos and read the Tutorial Documentation for explanations on what the project aims to accomplish and the nitty-gritty of how to participate.
- Click on "My Sheets" to bring up five specimens to catalog. You can also search for specimens by species if you have an interest in a particular plant type.
- Click on one of you sheets and enter the requested data in the form fields. Move the image around and zoom in on the collection tags to find all the necessary information.
- If you get stuck, note that writing is illegible and flag it for other users to help with. The sheet will stay in your queue for cataloging while you move on to other items. Once a fellow user finds the answer just go back to the previous sheet and record the answer.
But nothing can happen until this data has been digitized. So help both past and future citizen scientists by signing up. You'll be glad you did.
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