14 Matching Annotations
  1. Jan 2023
    1. f you have a sensor kit from Hollandse Luchten, we urge you to disconnect the humidity meter. We recently found out that the humidity

      They quit using these HoLu kits as the data was unrealiable. Here they were removing the humidity sensor as it was causing some problems

    1. ost commercially available sensors are expensive, and cannot be altered orextended to accommodate your specific data collection needs. In open hardware

      open hardware approach (2018) from Waag group

    1. oin the Fablab Network, an international movement in personal fabricatio

      International fabrication lab network

    1. These ‘HoLu kits’ are being distributed in pilots to residents who live in regions where the air quality is poor, such as around the Tata steel factory in the IJmond area. We teach citizens to measure the surrounding air quality and to interpret the data.

      Smart Citizen Lab aspart of Waag.

      pay attention to the HoLu project

    1. but EPAs and citizen science project leaders needto address issues of data quality and sensor calibration

      issue of Data Quality and sensor calibration

    2. he RIVM and the DutchMinistry for Infrastructure and the Environment (responsible for air qual-ity in the Netherlands) agreed to start a programme to innovate itsnational air quality measurement network (LML)

      RIVM is the Dutch Institure for Public Healrh and Environment and became involved with citizen scientce AQ projects in 2012

  2. watermark.silverchair.com watermark.silverchair.com
    1. from in situ sensors.

      use the term "in situ sensor", which means "in original place"

    1. Different types of technologies and supporting resources usedin citizen science

      a table of citizen science technologies

    2. explicit (whencitizens collect the data themselves) or implicit (when contributors sharegeolocated photographs, videos or messages on social media

      explicit vs. implicit data collection

    3. This is followed by a discussion of how keytechnological developments have created and expanded opportunities forcitizen participation. T

      importance of expanding opportunities

    4. Such data collection generally followed apaper-based approach, with volunteers either systematically recordingobservations or individually sending evidence such as photographs orspecimens to professional scientists, along with key metadata such asobservation time and location

      traditional citizen science paradigm