Citizen science still needs specialism
The public can be involved in constructing knowledge. But some data sets are more easily offered for external use than others
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2010/jun/20/citizen-science-data-sets
Citizen science still needs specialismThe public can be involved in constructing knowledge. But some data sets are more easily offered for external use than others http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2010/jun/20/citizen-science-data-sets Two recent examples of successful projects in "citizen science", Opal and Galaxy Zoo, deal with topics many people enjoy as hobbies. They also happen to be able to identify tasks in scientific research that are relatively easy to pick up. In these respects they are lucky. However, I also want to stress that these projects work because they offer collaborative relationships between scientists and the public. They have a capacity for mutual learning. Precisely because data needs context and often requires specialist skills to analyse, projects such as these succeed because they are discursive. and One key point was summed up by physicist Tom Whyntie: "open data is useless (dangerous?) without an open methodology too?" ****************** Tracey P. Lauriault 613-234-2805 https://gcrc.carleton.ca/confluence/display/GCRCWEB/Lauriault |
I am forwarding a message I sent to CARTA-L this morning:
I wonder if any of you might have read the article in ArcNorth Magazine about North Vancouver. They have opened up their data in a big way. Not only do they have a mapping portal, they even have most of their gis layers available for download. What is even more impressive is the types of layers they have on offer. Things we in Toronto could only dream about such as Zoning, bike routes, contours at 1m, 10m, 20m, and 100m intervals, buildings, even crime data and more. The data are also available in in CAD, KML, Shapefile, and even geodatabase. This is a really good open data model. The license isn't bad either! It seems to be interested more in accuracy and quality, rather than protecting themselves. There also does not appear to be a click wrap requirement for data use. One little problem in the licensing though is that it states that NV does not permit the user to rent, sell, distribute, transfer, or grant any rights to the content in whole or in part to another person or organization. Not sure what that really means! The article can be found here: http://tinyurl.com/2wrpaum and the north vancouver data can be found here: http://www.geoweb.dnv.org/data/ Marcel ------------------------------ Marcel Fortin, Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and Map Librarian Map and Data Library University of Toronto 5027 Robarts Library 130 St. George Street, Toronto, ON M5S 1A5 tel: 416.978.1958 fax: 416-946-0522 http://mdl.library.utoronto.ca Twitter: http://twitter.com/mapsgis |
In reply to this post by Tracey P. Lauriault
I am forwarding a message I sent to CARTA-L this morning:
I wonder if any of you might have read the article in ArcNorth Magazine about North Vancouver. They have opened up their data in a big way. Not only do they have a mapping portal, they even have most of their gis layers available for download. What is even more impressive is the types of layers they have on offer. Things we in Toronto could only dream about such as Zoning, bike routes, contours at 1m, 10m, 20m, and 100m intervals, buildings, even crime data and more. The data are also available in in CAD, KML, Shapefile, and even geodatabase. This is a really good open data model. The license isn't bad either! It seems to be interested more in accuracy and quality, rather than protecting themselves. There also does not appear to be a click wrap requirement for data use. One little problem in the licensing though is that it states that NV does not permit the user to rent, sell, distribute, transfer, or grant any rights to the content in whole or in part to another person or organization. Not sure what that really means! The article can be found here: http://tinyurl.com/2wrpaum and the north vancouver data can be found here: http://www.geoweb.dnv.org/data/ Marcel ------------------------------ Marcel Fortin, Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and Map Librarian Map and Data Library University of Toronto 5027 Robarts Library 130 St. George Street, Toronto, ON M5S 1A5 tel: 416.978.1958 fax: 416-946-0522 http://mdl.library.utoronto.ca Twitter: http://twitter.com/mapsgis |
Free forum by Nabble | Edit this page |