In this article we outline various citizen science projects and resources that allow you to get involved with hands on scientific research. Citizen science projects actively involve citizens in scientific endeavour that generates new knowledge or understanding.
Citizen science is an increasingly valuable and legitimate scientific tool where the general public – people without any formal scientific training or education – become actively involved in scientific research.
Modern citizen science has been around for over 100 years, though the phrase “citizen science” itself wasn’t coined until the mid-1990s by sociologist Alan Irving. With an increase in accessibility of new technology like the internet and smart phones, there’s been a dramatic increase in the number and diversity of citizen science projects in the last few decades.
Citizen science was featured in the Cosmos Science Briefing panel as one of the “7 ideas that are changing the world”.
It’s truly a gamechanger if it allows scientists to undertake research that wouldn’t have been otherwise possible, perhaps due to a lack of people, or funding. It’s also an opportunity for education and outreach where the participating public can learn about science and the process of scientific research.
Citizen science has been used to help classify recordings of baby-talk, identify behaviour changes in birds during COVID-19 lockdowns, and even discover a massive coral on the Great Barrier Reef.
Read more with COSMOS: The current state of citizen science
Why not get involved in these citizen science projects?
Insect investigators
Estimates suggest that more than 70% of Australia’s insect diversity is still largely unknown to science, meaning they don’t have a formal name. Insect investigators is a collaborative science project working with schools across South Australia, Western Australia and Queensland to collect invertebrate specimens – insects, bugs, spiders, and some marine creatures – and then describe them formally.
The team of taxonomists run sessions with students to educate them in the scientific process and how it’s applied to Australian biodiversity. They head out with students into regional Australia to catch insects and then expert taxonomists hit the microscopes and DNA labs to place the species within the tree of life. They then head back to the students who found it to name the species.
Foldit
There’s nothing better than playing a game that actually teaches you something, and with Foldit players can get hands-on experience with the incredibly important molecular biology process of protein folding. Players solve how a protein folds into a 3-dimensional, functional structure based on its amino acid sequence.
Predicting how proteins fold is incredibly computationally demanding, so the researchers rely on player intuition and reasoning to discover new folds and protein designs to then test in the lab.
QuestaGame
What’s better than getting out and about in nature while learning something new about the incredible wildlife you encounter? QuestaGame is an outdoor, multiplayer, adventure game where the mission is to take pictures and submit as many sightings of unique species as you can. Even better, the sightings are shared with national and global biodiversity databases.
Stall Catchers
Citizen scientists are helping speed up research focusing on one aspect of Alzheimer’s disease with the online game Stall Catchers. Researchers had previously discovered that in mice with Alzheimers, stalls (clogged blood vessels in the brain) are responsible for this blood flow reduction, and by reducing the number of stalls the lab was able to restore memory and reduce other cognitive symptoms in mice.
But to understand exactly how stalls are contributing to Alzheimer’s they need to get through a lot of data, and that’s where Stall Catchers comes in; players look at videos of the brains of mice and try to identify blood vessels as either “flowing” or “stalled.”
Or go on the hunt for your next citizen science project yourself
The Australian Citizen Science Association (ACSA) encourages participation in citizen science, and has developed an Australian citizen science project finder to find Australian projects.
Zooniverse is the largest and most popular global platform for finding online citizen science-powered research, and is home to some of the internet’s most successful citizen science projects – like Galaxy Zoo, Chimp & See, and Backyard Worlds: Planet 9. It also lets you know which projects could really use your help right now, in case you need help narrowing down your choice!
Through SciStarter’s project finder you can find, join, and contribute to science through more than 3,000 formal and informal research projects, events, and tools, and even filter by location to find projects near you.
You can read about and join projects run by CSIRO and of course, look back through the stories written on the Cosmos website under our Citizen Science tag.