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Crowdsourced Water Level Monitoring in Kenya’s Sondu-Miriu Basin—Who Is “The Crowd”?

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Crowdsourced Water Level Monitoring in Kenya’s Sondu-Miriu Basin—Who Is “The Crowd”? / Weeser, B.; Gräf, J.; Njue, N.K. et al.
In: Frontiers in Earth Science, Vol. 8, 602422, 21.01.2021.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Weeser, B, Gräf, J, Njue, NK, Cerutti, P, Rufino, MC, Breuer, L & Jacobs, SR 2021, 'Crowdsourced Water Level Monitoring in Kenya’s Sondu-Miriu Basin—Who Is “The Crowd”?', Frontiers in Earth Science, vol. 8, 602422. https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2020.602422

APA

Weeser, B., Gräf, J., Njue, N. K., Cerutti, P., Rufino, M. C., Breuer, L., & Jacobs, S. R. (2021). Crowdsourced Water Level Monitoring in Kenya’s Sondu-Miriu Basin—Who Is “The Crowd”? Frontiers in Earth Science, 8, Article 602422. https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2020.602422

Vancouver

Weeser B, Gräf J, Njue NK, Cerutti P, Rufino MC, Breuer L et al. Crowdsourced Water Level Monitoring in Kenya’s Sondu-Miriu Basin—Who Is “The Crowd”? Frontiers in Earth Science. 2021 Jan 21;8:602422. doi: 10.3389/feart.2020.602422

Author

Weeser, B. ; Gräf, J. ; Njue, N.K. et al. / Crowdsourced Water Level Monitoring in Kenya’s Sondu-Miriu Basin—Who Is “The Crowd”?. In: Frontiers in Earth Science. 2021 ; Vol. 8.

Bibtex

@article{93768c4ae9b04138acc954fbbcdea97f,
title = "Crowdsourced Water Level Monitoring in Kenya{\textquoteright}s Sondu-Miriu Basin—Who Is “The Crowd”?",
abstract = "Citizen science is gaining popularity as a way to engage people to participate in environmental projects. In addition to potential challenges regarding data quality and the choice of variables, a key factor in the success of participatory monitoring projects is the active participation of volunteers, the “citizen scientists.” To learn more about the motivation of citizen scientists to participate and their socio-economic background, a telephone survey was implemented with participants of a citizen science water level monitoring program in the Sondu-Miriu basin, western Kenya. We analyzed the data using descriptive statistics and random forest models to elucidate the characteristics of the participant population, underlying motivations, and the challenges and opportunities to develop recommendations for sustainable community-based water monitoring programs. As citizen scientists who engaged long-term were 30–49 years old, had primary or secondary school education and passed by the monitoring station frequently, targeting sensitization activities at people with such background could increase participation in community-based water monitoring. Sensitization meetings were key in engaging long-term volunteers, but participants indicated that continued feedback through education and communication of the project findings is required to keep volunteers motivated. The use of cellphone credit to submit data was identified as challenge for participation, highlighting the need for data submission methods that do not incur costs for the participants. Greater volunteer support could also be achieved by active involvement of the members of Water Resource Users Associations, since membership increased the likelihood of continuous engagement in water monitoring under the participants. Furthermore, many participants indicated that their motivation was to help water management and conservation, as most people rely directly on rivers for their water supply. Providing a platform to contribute to better water resources management could therefore result in direct benefits (e.g., improved water supply) for the participants, and thus an incentive to participate actively.",
keywords = "Africa, citizen science, community-based monitoring, crowdsourcing, motivation, telephone survey, water level",
author = "B. Weeser and J. Gr{\"a}f and N.K. Njue and P. Cerutti and M.C. Rufino and L. Breuer and S.R. Jacobs",
year = "2021",
month = jan,
day = "21",
doi = "10.3389/feart.2020.602422",
language = "English",
volume = "8",
journal = "Frontiers in Earth Science",
issn = "2296-6463",
publisher = "Frontiers Research Foundation",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Crowdsourced Water Level Monitoring in Kenya’s Sondu-Miriu Basin—Who Is “The Crowd”?

AU - Weeser, B.

AU - Gräf, J.

AU - Njue, N.K.

AU - Cerutti, P.

AU - Rufino, M.C.

AU - Breuer, L.

AU - Jacobs, S.R.

PY - 2021/1/21

Y1 - 2021/1/21

N2 - Citizen science is gaining popularity as a way to engage people to participate in environmental projects. In addition to potential challenges regarding data quality and the choice of variables, a key factor in the success of participatory monitoring projects is the active participation of volunteers, the “citizen scientists.” To learn more about the motivation of citizen scientists to participate and their socio-economic background, a telephone survey was implemented with participants of a citizen science water level monitoring program in the Sondu-Miriu basin, western Kenya. We analyzed the data using descriptive statistics and random forest models to elucidate the characteristics of the participant population, underlying motivations, and the challenges and opportunities to develop recommendations for sustainable community-based water monitoring programs. As citizen scientists who engaged long-term were 30–49 years old, had primary or secondary school education and passed by the monitoring station frequently, targeting sensitization activities at people with such background could increase participation in community-based water monitoring. Sensitization meetings were key in engaging long-term volunteers, but participants indicated that continued feedback through education and communication of the project findings is required to keep volunteers motivated. The use of cellphone credit to submit data was identified as challenge for participation, highlighting the need for data submission methods that do not incur costs for the participants. Greater volunteer support could also be achieved by active involvement of the members of Water Resource Users Associations, since membership increased the likelihood of continuous engagement in water monitoring under the participants. Furthermore, many participants indicated that their motivation was to help water management and conservation, as most people rely directly on rivers for their water supply. Providing a platform to contribute to better water resources management could therefore result in direct benefits (e.g., improved water supply) for the participants, and thus an incentive to participate actively.

AB - Citizen science is gaining popularity as a way to engage people to participate in environmental projects. In addition to potential challenges regarding data quality and the choice of variables, a key factor in the success of participatory monitoring projects is the active participation of volunteers, the “citizen scientists.” To learn more about the motivation of citizen scientists to participate and their socio-economic background, a telephone survey was implemented with participants of a citizen science water level monitoring program in the Sondu-Miriu basin, western Kenya. We analyzed the data using descriptive statistics and random forest models to elucidate the characteristics of the participant population, underlying motivations, and the challenges and opportunities to develop recommendations for sustainable community-based water monitoring programs. As citizen scientists who engaged long-term were 30–49 years old, had primary or secondary school education and passed by the monitoring station frequently, targeting sensitization activities at people with such background could increase participation in community-based water monitoring. Sensitization meetings were key in engaging long-term volunteers, but participants indicated that continued feedback through education and communication of the project findings is required to keep volunteers motivated. The use of cellphone credit to submit data was identified as challenge for participation, highlighting the need for data submission methods that do not incur costs for the participants. Greater volunteer support could also be achieved by active involvement of the members of Water Resource Users Associations, since membership increased the likelihood of continuous engagement in water monitoring under the participants. Furthermore, many participants indicated that their motivation was to help water management and conservation, as most people rely directly on rivers for their water supply. Providing a platform to contribute to better water resources management could therefore result in direct benefits (e.g., improved water supply) for the participants, and thus an incentive to participate actively.

KW - Africa

KW - citizen science

KW - community-based monitoring

KW - crowdsourcing

KW - motivation

KW - telephone survey

KW - water level

U2 - 10.3389/feart.2020.602422

DO - 10.3389/feart.2020.602422

M3 - Journal article

VL - 8

JO - Frontiers in Earth Science

JF - Frontiers in Earth Science

SN - 2296-6463

M1 - 602422

ER -