Brief presentation of our OpenSystems UB Research Group activity mostly focused on Computational Social Science and in relation with Citizen Science Practices. Presentation in the COMSOTEC meeting held in Santander (Spetember 10, 2015). Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Cantabria, Santander.
Breve charla dentro del Debate Ciencia ciudadana en acción junto con Ana Omedes, Toni Gabaldón y Daniel García. El debate formaba part de la 5ª edición del Campus Gutenberg, una escuela de verano dedicada a la comunicación y a la cultura científica impulsada por el Máster de Comunicación Científica, Médica y Ambiental (UPF-IDEC) y la Obra Social “la Caixa”, en colaboración con el Centro de Estudios de Ciencia, Comunicación y Sociedad (CCS-UPF) y la Associació Catalana de Comunicació Científica (ACCC). 14 de septiembre de 2015
Collective experimentation on human behaviour using citizen science practices Josep Perelló
Granada Seminar (15-‐19 June 2015). Physics Meets the Social Sciences.
We present the citizen science projects we have been running during the past 3 years. We have adopted the idea of running
collective experiments in public spaces of Barcelona to create
crowd-sourced data atainning to concrete questions.
We have been focussed on non‐permanent
or pop-up experiments on
1. human mobility through voluntary tracking. In a park (Science Festival) and in an exhibition room (museum).
2. human decision making through games, as a complementary approach through three different games (Board Game Festival in Barcelona).
Such data sources have allowed us to develop some stochastic models on human behaviour under concrete situations or circumstances. We critically analyse them and extract experience‐based conclusions from both a methodological and conceptual perspective.
Preliminary detailed program of key-note sessions and full paper parallel sessions.
The 1st Global Thematic IASC Conference on the Knowledge Commons brings together leading people from a number of international scientific research communities, social science researchers, practitioners
and policy analysts, to discuss the rationale and practical feasibility of institutional arrangements designed to emulate key public domain conditions for collaborative research.
All Hands on Deck - Getting Visitors Involved in the Work of the Museum (AAM ...sloverlinett
It’s the age of participatory engagement, and the crowd is making vital contributions in areas where only experts used to tread. How can museums harness their visitors’ collective skills and intelligence, not just to make exhibits and programs more engaging but also to help carry out the museum’s scientific, historical, aesthetic, or environmental work? In this panel, we looked at how three science-themed institutions are approaching this new frontier and what the future holds in three state-of-the-art facilities now on the drawing boards: a new learning space at the National Museum of Natural History; a redesigned visitor center at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida; and the new Nature Research Center at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences. In the q&a, we debated the whys and hows of bringing citizen science inside the museum and inviting visitors to lend their hands, eyes, and minds to the cause.
Breve charla dentro del Debate Ciencia ciudadana en acción junto con Ana Omedes, Toni Gabaldón y Daniel García. El debate formaba part de la 5ª edición del Campus Gutenberg, una escuela de verano dedicada a la comunicación y a la cultura científica impulsada por el Máster de Comunicación Científica, Médica y Ambiental (UPF-IDEC) y la Obra Social “la Caixa”, en colaboración con el Centro de Estudios de Ciencia, Comunicación y Sociedad (CCS-UPF) y la Associació Catalana de Comunicació Científica (ACCC). 14 de septiembre de 2015
Collective experimentation on human behaviour using citizen science practices Josep Perelló
Granada Seminar (15-‐19 June 2015). Physics Meets the Social Sciences.
We present the citizen science projects we have been running during the past 3 years. We have adopted the idea of running
collective experiments in public spaces of Barcelona to create
crowd-sourced data atainning to concrete questions.
We have been focussed on non‐permanent
or pop-up experiments on
1. human mobility through voluntary tracking. In a park (Science Festival) and in an exhibition room (museum).
2. human decision making through games, as a complementary approach through three different games (Board Game Festival in Barcelona).
Such data sources have allowed us to develop some stochastic models on human behaviour under concrete situations or circumstances. We critically analyse them and extract experience‐based conclusions from both a methodological and conceptual perspective.
Preliminary detailed program of key-note sessions and full paper parallel sessions.
The 1st Global Thematic IASC Conference on the Knowledge Commons brings together leading people from a number of international scientific research communities, social science researchers, practitioners
and policy analysts, to discuss the rationale and practical feasibility of institutional arrangements designed to emulate key public domain conditions for collaborative research.
All Hands on Deck - Getting Visitors Involved in the Work of the Museum (AAM ...sloverlinett
It’s the age of participatory engagement, and the crowd is making vital contributions in areas where only experts used to tread. How can museums harness their visitors’ collective skills and intelligence, not just to make exhibits and programs more engaging but also to help carry out the museum’s scientific, historical, aesthetic, or environmental work? In this panel, we looked at how three science-themed institutions are approaching this new frontier and what the future holds in three state-of-the-art facilities now on the drawing boards: a new learning space at the National Museum of Natural History; a redesigned visitor center at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida; and the new Nature Research Center at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences. In the q&a, we debated the whys and hows of bringing citizen science inside the museum and inviting visitors to lend their hands, eyes, and minds to the cause.
Design of innovative learning environments in the context of developing a Cit...Elena Jurado
Design of innovative learning environments in the context of developing a Citizen Observatory, presented at the 3rd Barcelona Citizen Science Day, 18th November 2016. By Elena Jurado, Jaume Piera, Josep M. Mominó, Luigi Ceccaroni
A summer residence to understand, discuss and act on the transformation of the present. A combination of theory and practice to foster the transition towards emerging collaborative economies building a more resilient society.
http://commons.camp/
Building Institutions for Sustainable Scientific, Cultural and genetic Resources Commons.
12-14th September 2012
Université catholique de Louvain, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium
The 1st Global Thematic IASC Conference on the Knowledge Commons aims to bring together leading people from a number of international scientific research communities, social science researchers, practitioners and policy analysts, to discuss the rationale and practical feasibility of institutional arrangements designed to emulate key public domain conditions for collaborative research.
The role of learning in community science and citizen scienceMuki Haklay
This are slides from the talk on 12 Oct, Joint workshop of the Teaching and Learning and Citizen Science Special Interest Groups of the British Ecological Society, which was held on 12th October 2018 at the University of Reading. The talk explores links between learning and citizen science - contributory and collegial in particular. This is an improved version of the Citizen Inquiry slides
Open Science new strategies need new science structures to be developed. We call it: open labs, new research and innovation environments based on a synthesis of current structures (academic research groups, companies, civic organitzations, public bodies,...). These open labs are currently emerging as living labs, fablabs, citizen labs, xlabs....
Until now new technologies have connected old economic, social, political structures. Nevertheless new structures are emerging.
Participatory biological recording in the UK is a triumph of public contribution to our collective knowledge of the natural world. Devoted volunteers and enthusiasts generate vast databanks supporting environmental policy, research and practice with baseline data for thousands of native and non-native UK species.
As threats to UK wildlife mount, the need to grow the evidence base for effective conservation becomes increasingly vital. We need effective communications tools to be able to share this amazing energy and support an accessible, well informed citizen science culture. What key stories should we be telling to empower local communities in spaces on their doorsteps, and develop the practical skills among the existing and emerging army of volunteers, advocates and citizen scientists that will provide the evidence base and help shape the discussion going forward?
Open Science - Paradigm Shift or Revival of Old Ideas?Heidi Laine
Slides for a lecture held as part of a course on Science and Society, organized by the University of Helsinki Doctoral School HYMY during spring semester 2016.
The role of learning in citizen scienceMuki Haklay
This is a presentation from the citizen science impact event at the Open University http://www.open.ac.uk/blogs/opentel/citizen-science-impact-event-at-the-open-university/
Citizen science offer different levels of engagement to participants, which have been captured in typologies of the field (contributory, collaborative, co-created, collegial / crowdsourcing, distributed intelligence, participatory science, extreme citizen science). These typologies do no explicitly examine learning. At the same time, projects and activities striving to fulfil multiple goals (excellent scientific output, satisfying engagement, good recruitment, learning …). Within ythe range of citizen science project, we can consider different aspects of learning that are occurring in them, Projects and use examples from a range of project, and raise some aspects that can help those who are designing co-created projects.
Citizen Science in Open Science context: measuring & understanding impacts of...Muki Haklay
Within the emerging European agenda for open science, deeper public engagement with science, through citizen science, is now part and parcel of Horizon Europe. Yet, there are many issues that need to be understood – the uneven landscape of citizen science across the European Research Area, scientific disciplines, and institutions; the balancing of multiple goals that citizen science projects enact between raising awareness to scientific issues to producing data and analysis that can lead to top discoveries; measuring and assessing the outcomes and outputs of projects; and consideration about the data, analysis, and outputs. The talk will provide a short introduction to citizen science and modes of engagement in it, introduce the “Doing It Together Science” (DITOs) escalator model; and review some of the emerging policy responses to citizen science across the world.
Professor Teresa Sordé, Member of the IMPACT-EV project research team and Pro...IrishHumanitiesAlliance
From the IHA Impact in the Humanities event 8 June held in QUB and co-sponsored by InterTradeIreland.
Panel Two: Impact in Horizon 2020 and the EU
How is Impact conceptualised and captured at the EU level, in programmes such as Horizon 2020, and how does this affect academics, research officers and policy makers at the national level?
Nutraceutical market, scope and growth: Herbal drug technologyLokesh Patil
As consumer awareness of health and wellness rises, the nutraceutical market—which includes goods like functional meals, drinks, and dietary supplements that provide health advantages beyond basic nutrition—is growing significantly. As healthcare expenses rise, the population ages, and people want natural and preventative health solutions more and more, this industry is increasing quickly. Further driving market expansion are product formulation innovations and the use of cutting-edge technology for customized nutrition. With its worldwide reach, the nutraceutical industry is expected to keep growing and provide significant chances for research and investment in a number of categories, including vitamins, minerals, probiotics, and herbal supplements.
(May 29th, 2024) Advancements in Intravital Microscopy- Insights for Preclini...Scintica Instrumentation
Intravital microscopy (IVM) is a powerful tool utilized to study cellular behavior over time and space in vivo. Much of our understanding of cell biology has been accomplished using various in vitro and ex vivo methods; however, these studies do not necessarily reflect the natural dynamics of biological processes. Unlike traditional cell culture or fixed tissue imaging, IVM allows for the ultra-fast high-resolution imaging of cellular processes over time and space and were studied in its natural environment. Real-time visualization of biological processes in the context of an intact organism helps maintain physiological relevance and provide insights into the progression of disease, response to treatments or developmental processes.
In this webinar we give an overview of advanced applications of the IVM system in preclinical research. IVIM technology is a provider of all-in-one intravital microscopy systems and solutions optimized for in vivo imaging of live animal models at sub-micron resolution. The system’s unique features and user-friendly software enables researchers to probe fast dynamic biological processes such as immune cell tracking, cell-cell interaction as well as vascularization and tumor metastasis with exceptional detail. This webinar will also give an overview of IVM being utilized in drug development, offering a view into the intricate interaction between drugs/nanoparticles and tissues in vivo and allows for the evaluation of therapeutic intervention in a variety of tissues and organs. This interdisciplinary collaboration continues to drive the advancements of novel therapeutic strategies.
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Design of innovative learning environments in the context of developing a Cit...Elena Jurado
Design of innovative learning environments in the context of developing a Citizen Observatory, presented at the 3rd Barcelona Citizen Science Day, 18th November 2016. By Elena Jurado, Jaume Piera, Josep M. Mominó, Luigi Ceccaroni
A summer residence to understand, discuss and act on the transformation of the present. A combination of theory and practice to foster the transition towards emerging collaborative economies building a more resilient society.
http://commons.camp/
Building Institutions for Sustainable Scientific, Cultural and genetic Resources Commons.
12-14th September 2012
Université catholique de Louvain, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium
The 1st Global Thematic IASC Conference on the Knowledge Commons aims to bring together leading people from a number of international scientific research communities, social science researchers, practitioners and policy analysts, to discuss the rationale and practical feasibility of institutional arrangements designed to emulate key public domain conditions for collaborative research.
The role of learning in community science and citizen scienceMuki Haklay
This are slides from the talk on 12 Oct, Joint workshop of the Teaching and Learning and Citizen Science Special Interest Groups of the British Ecological Society, which was held on 12th October 2018 at the University of Reading. The talk explores links between learning and citizen science - contributory and collegial in particular. This is an improved version of the Citizen Inquiry slides
Open Science new strategies need new science structures to be developed. We call it: open labs, new research and innovation environments based on a synthesis of current structures (academic research groups, companies, civic organitzations, public bodies,...). These open labs are currently emerging as living labs, fablabs, citizen labs, xlabs....
Until now new technologies have connected old economic, social, political structures. Nevertheless new structures are emerging.
Participatory biological recording in the UK is a triumph of public contribution to our collective knowledge of the natural world. Devoted volunteers and enthusiasts generate vast databanks supporting environmental policy, research and practice with baseline data for thousands of native and non-native UK species.
As threats to UK wildlife mount, the need to grow the evidence base for effective conservation becomes increasingly vital. We need effective communications tools to be able to share this amazing energy and support an accessible, well informed citizen science culture. What key stories should we be telling to empower local communities in spaces on their doorsteps, and develop the practical skills among the existing and emerging army of volunteers, advocates and citizen scientists that will provide the evidence base and help shape the discussion going forward?
Open Science - Paradigm Shift or Revival of Old Ideas?Heidi Laine
Slides for a lecture held as part of a course on Science and Society, organized by the University of Helsinki Doctoral School HYMY during spring semester 2016.
The role of learning in citizen scienceMuki Haklay
This is a presentation from the citizen science impact event at the Open University http://www.open.ac.uk/blogs/opentel/citizen-science-impact-event-at-the-open-university/
Citizen science offer different levels of engagement to participants, which have been captured in typologies of the field (contributory, collaborative, co-created, collegial / crowdsourcing, distributed intelligence, participatory science, extreme citizen science). These typologies do no explicitly examine learning. At the same time, projects and activities striving to fulfil multiple goals (excellent scientific output, satisfying engagement, good recruitment, learning …). Within ythe range of citizen science project, we can consider different aspects of learning that are occurring in them, Projects and use examples from a range of project, and raise some aspects that can help those who are designing co-created projects.
Citizen Science in Open Science context: measuring & understanding impacts of...Muki Haklay
Within the emerging European agenda for open science, deeper public engagement with science, through citizen science, is now part and parcel of Horizon Europe. Yet, there are many issues that need to be understood – the uneven landscape of citizen science across the European Research Area, scientific disciplines, and institutions; the balancing of multiple goals that citizen science projects enact between raising awareness to scientific issues to producing data and analysis that can lead to top discoveries; measuring and assessing the outcomes and outputs of projects; and consideration about the data, analysis, and outputs. The talk will provide a short introduction to citizen science and modes of engagement in it, introduce the “Doing It Together Science” (DITOs) escalator model; and review some of the emerging policy responses to citizen science across the world.
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Nutraceutical market, scope and growth: Herbal drug technologyLokesh Patil
As consumer awareness of health and wellness rises, the nutraceutical market—which includes goods like functional meals, drinks, and dietary supplements that provide health advantages beyond basic nutrition—is growing significantly. As healthcare expenses rise, the population ages, and people want natural and preventative health solutions more and more, this industry is increasing quickly. Further driving market expansion are product formulation innovations and the use of cutting-edge technology for customized nutrition. With its worldwide reach, the nutraceutical industry is expected to keep growing and provide significant chances for research and investment in a number of categories, including vitamins, minerals, probiotics, and herbal supplements.
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In this webinar we give an overview of advanced applications of the IVM system in preclinical research. IVIM technology is a provider of all-in-one intravital microscopy systems and solutions optimized for in vivo imaging of live animal models at sub-micron resolution. The system’s unique features and user-friendly software enables researchers to probe fast dynamic biological processes such as immune cell tracking, cell-cell interaction as well as vascularization and tumor metastasis with exceptional detail. This webinar will also give an overview of IVM being utilized in drug development, offering a view into the intricate interaction between drugs/nanoparticles and tissues in vivo and allows for the evaluation of therapeutic intervention in a variety of tissues and organs. This interdisciplinary collaboration continues to drive the advancements of novel therapeutic strategies.
A brief information about the SCOP protein database used in bioinformatics.
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The ambient solar wind that flls the heliosphere originates from multiple
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Slide 1: Title Slide
Extrachromosomal Inheritance
Slide 2: Introduction to Extrachromosomal Inheritance
Definition: Extrachromosomal inheritance refers to the transmission of genetic material that is not found within the nucleus.
Key Components: Involves genes located in mitochondria, chloroplasts, and plasmids.
Slide 3: Mitochondrial Inheritance
Mitochondria: Organelles responsible for energy production.
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA): Circular DNA molecule found in mitochondria.
Inheritance Pattern: Maternally inherited, meaning it is passed from mothers to all their offspring.
Diseases: Examples include Leber’s hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) and mitochondrial myopathy.
Slide 4: Chloroplast Inheritance
Chloroplasts: Organelles responsible for photosynthesis in plants.
Chloroplast DNA (cpDNA): Circular DNA molecule found in chloroplasts.
Inheritance Pattern: Often maternally inherited in most plants, but can vary in some species.
Examples: Variegation in plants, where leaf color patterns are determined by chloroplast DNA.
Slide 5: Plasmid Inheritance
Plasmids: Small, circular DNA molecules found in bacteria and some eukaryotes.
Features: Can carry antibiotic resistance genes and can be transferred between cells through processes like conjugation.
Significance: Important in biotechnology for gene cloning and genetic engineering.
Slide 6: Mechanisms of Extrachromosomal Inheritance
Non-Mendelian Patterns: Do not follow Mendel’s laws of inheritance.
Cytoplasmic Segregation: During cell division, organelles like mitochondria and chloroplasts are randomly distributed to daughter cells.
Heteroplasmy: Presence of more than one type of organellar genome within a cell, leading to variation in expression.
Slide 7: Examples of Extrachromosomal Inheritance
Four O’clock Plant (Mirabilis jalapa): Shows variegated leaves due to different cpDNA in leaf cells.
Petite Mutants in Yeast: Result from mutations in mitochondrial DNA affecting respiration.
Slide 8: Importance of Extrachromosomal Inheritance
Evolution: Provides insight into the evolution of eukaryotic cells.
Medicine: Understanding mitochondrial inheritance helps in diagnosing and treating mitochondrial diseases.
Agriculture: Chloroplast inheritance can be used in plant breeding and genetic modification.
Slide 9: Recent Research and Advances
Gene Editing: Techniques like CRISPR-Cas9 are being used to edit mitochondrial and chloroplast DNA.
Therapies: Development of mitochondrial replacement therapy (MRT) for preventing mitochondrial diseases.
Slide 10: Conclusion
Summary: Extrachromosomal inheritance involves the transmission of genetic material outside the nucleus and plays a crucial role in genetics, medicine, and biotechnology.
Future Directions: Continued research and technological advancements hold promise for new treatments and applications.
Slide 11: Questions and Discussion
Invite Audience: Open the floor for any questions or further discussion on the topic.
Lateral Ventricles.pdf very easy good diagrams comprehensive
Can science be social? Collective and Citizen Experimentation in Computational Social Sciences
1. Can
science
be
social?
Collec-ve
and
Ci-zen
Experimenta-on
in
Computa-onal
Social
Sciences
Josep
Perelló
Josep.perello@ub.edu
@JosPerello
@OpenSystemsUB
/
@CLabBarcelona
COMSOTEC
(10
September
2015).
Facultad
de
Ciencias,
Universidad
de
Cantabria,
Santander
2. What
is
Social?
DefiniKon
(Merrian
Webster):
:
relaKng
to
or
involving
acKviKes
in
which
people
spend
Kme
talking
to
each
other
or
doing
enjoyable
things
with
each
other
:
liking
to
be
with
and
talk
to
people
:
happy
to
be
with
people
:
of
or
relaKng
to
people
or
society
in
general
3. :
marked
by
or
passed
in
pleasant
companionship
with
friends
or
associates
<an
acKve
social
life>
:
of,
relaKng
to,
or
designed
for
sociability
<a
social
club>
:
of
or
relaKng
to
human
society,
the
interacKon
of
the
individual
and
the
group,
or
the
welfare
of
human
beings
as
members
of
society
<social
insKtuKons>
:
tending
to
form
cooperaKve
and
interdependent
relaKonships
with
others
:
being
such
in
social
situaKons
<a
social
drinker>
5. Open
Innova8on
New
paradigm
based
on
a
Quadruple
Helix
Model
where
government,
industry,
academia
and
civil
parKcipants
work
together
to
co-‐create
the
future
and
drive
structural
changes
far
beyond
the
scope
of
what
any
one
organizaKon
or
person
could
do
alone.
User-‐oriented
innovaKon
to
take
full
advantage
of
ideas'
cross-‐
fer8lisa8on
leading
to
experimenta8on
and
prototyping
in
real
world
seBng.
Henry
Chesbroug
(2003)
6. Research
in
the
wild
Michel
Callon
(2003)
1. Researchers
in
the
wild
are
directly
concerned
with
the
knowledge
they
produce
because
they
are
both
the
objects
and
the
subjects
of
their
research.
2. Produc8on
and
appropria8on
overlap
to
a
large
extent,
since
it
is
one
group
that
in
the
same
movement
elaborates
and
uses
the
knowledge.
3. Incen8ves
are
of
a
different
nature,
for
what
is
at
issue
in
the
case
of
research
in
the
wild
is
fate
and
the
survival
of
the
group
whose
members
wish
to
save
their
lives.
7. Research
in
the
wild
Michel
Callon
(2003)
4.
Largely
as
a
consequence
of
the
preceding
points,
we
cannot
separate
the
elabora8on
of
knowledge
from
the
construc8on
of
an
iden8ty
because
this
idenKty
is
also
common
and
shared
before
being
individual.
5.
Research
in
the
wild
makes
a
strong
contribu8on
to
the
formula8on
of
problems
and
ques8ons
that
become
intelligible
for
confined
researchers,
some
of
whom
have
parKcipated
in
their
elaboraKon.
The
concerned
groups,
owing
to
their
investment
in
research,
are
no
longer
the
only
ones
concerned.
8. Collec8ve
Experimenta8on
By
contribuKng
to
a
beaer
understanding
of
these
new
and
complicated
collecKve
dynamics,
science
studies
will
enrich
debate
on,
and
the
performance
of,
the
collecKves.
Share
risk
with
all
parKcipants
CollecKve
experimentaKon
and
co-‐create
the
soluKons
and
the
experiments
From
maaers
of
fact
to
maaers
of
concern
(Latour:
Ecology
vs.
Ecologism)
9.
“A
laboratory
experiment
is
a
rare,
costly,
local,
arKficial
set
up.”
Bruno
Latour
10. OpenSystems
Departament
de
Fisica
Fonamental
Universitat
de
Barcelona
www.ub.edu/
opensystems
@OpenSystemsUB
Since
2012
OpenSystems
11. When
dissemina8on
is
not
anymore
dissemina8on
MACBA
(Barcelona
Contemporary
Art
Museum)
Sistemes
Oberts
(2012/13-‐2014/15).
Official
training
course
for
teachers.
13. Aerial
Cartography
of
a
Neighborhood
(Raval
Barcelona,
2015).
Public
Lab
When
dissemina8on
is
not
anymore
dissemina8on
14. Paral·lel (Molino)
Plaça de la Bella Dorita. Barcelona
Fecha: 19.00h. 15 abril 2015
Fotógrafos: Teb Raval; Basurama; Public Laboratory.
Herramienta: Mapknitter
Imágenes y mapa: http://mapknitter.org/maps/parallel-2015
Licencia: Dominio Público
Resolución: cm/pixel
Coordenadas: Latitud 41.3745415 Longitud 2.1677728
Cartógrafo: Pablo Rey Mazón
N
Cartogra a aérea de barri
Dentro del festival NOVUM 2015.
Taller de fotografía aérea con globos.
100m0200m50m150m
15. Barcelona
CiKzen
Science
Office
hap://cciutadana.barcelonalab.cat
@CCiutadana
Riu.NET
:
hap://riunet.net
AtrapaElTigre
:
hap://atrapaelKgre.com
Pollen
and
Allergies
:
hap://lap.uab.cat/aerobiologia
Seawatchers
:
hap://observadorsdelmar.cat
OpenSystems
:
hap://ub.edu/opensystems
Community
of
pracKce
with
5
different
research
groups
having
CiKzen
Science
projects.
Since
2012
16. Ci8zen
Science
“general
public
engagement
in
scienKfic
research
acKviKes
when
ciKzens
acKvely
contribute
to
science
either
with
their
intellectual
effort
or
surrounding
knowledge
or
with
their
tools
and
resources”
Green
Book
of
CiKzen
Science
SocienKze
(IberCivis,
EU
project)
OpenBeeResearch.
Urban
Bees
Project
19. Urban
Bees:
Castell
dels
Tres
Dragons
(Museu
de
Ciències
Naturals),
HANGAR,
IMI-‐Ayuntamiento
de
Barcelona,
ICUB-‐Ayuntamiento
de
Barcelona,
UB
Sensors
(Arduino):
Humidity,
Temperature,
Bee-‐Counter,
Sound,
Video
and
weight
SocienKze
(Ibercivis,
UZ),
EU
project.
Socios:
Melliferopolis
(FI)
i
OpenBeeLab
(FR).
www.openbeeresearch.org
(en
construcción)
OpenBeeResearch
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25. Human
Behaviour
and
Games
Board
Game
Fes8val
DAU
2013
• 283
volunteers,
24,375
decisions
• TesKng
Efficient
Market
Hypothesis
• Decision
making
and
emergent
strategies
in
an
uncertain
environment.
• hap://mr-‐banks.net
Results
• M.
GuKérrez-‐Roig,
J.
Duch,
J.
Perelló,
in
preparaKon,
2015
28. Joint
work
on
I.
Bonhoure,
O.
Sagarra
and
M.
GuKérrez-‐Roig
Shaping
a
solu8on:
the
Pop-‐Up
Experiments
Experiments
Bee-‐Path(1)
Bee-‐Path(2)
Coopera8on(1)
Coopera8on(2)
Mr.
Banks(1)
Mr.
Banks(2)
Dr.
Brain
1.General
Informa8on
Date
June
2012
June
2013
Dec
2012
March
2014
Dec
2013
July
2015
Dec
2014
Topic
Human
Mobility
Human
Mobility
Social
Dilemmas
Social
Dilemmas
Decision
Making
Decision
Making
Social
Dilemmas
Number
of
volunteers
101a
68b
168
52
307
42
580
Number
of
records
10,312
GPS
points
10,315
GPS
pointsb
4,200
decisions
1,300
decisions
18,525
decisions
2,372
decisions
8,659
decisions
Budget
(approx.)
4,000
EUR
3,500
EUR
2,000
EUR
1,000
EUR
2,500
EUR
1,300
EUR
1,000
EUR
29.
30. A
Pop-‐Up-‐Experiment
(PUE)
is
a
physical,
light,
very
flexible,
highly
adaptable,
reproducible,
transportable,
tuneable,
collecKve,
parKcipatory
and
public
experimental
set-‐up
for
urban
contexts
that
(1) applies
CiKzen
Science
pracKces
and
ideals
to
provide
ground-‐breaking
knowledge
and
(2) transforms
the
experiment
into
a
valuable,
socially
responsible,
consented
and
transparent
experience
to
non-‐expert
volunteered
parKcipants
with
the
possibility
to
build
the
urban
commons
arisen
from
facts-‐based
effecKve
knowledge
valid
for
both
ciKes
and
ciKzens.
Shaping
a
solu8on:
the
Pop-‐Up
Experiments
Joint
work
with
I.
Bonhoure,
O.
Sagarra
and
M.
GuKérrez-‐Roig
31. Pop-‐up
Experiments
along
ci8zen
science
framework
1. CollecKve
ExperimentaKon
sharing
publicly
the
risk
with
all
parKcipants.
2. Volunteers
should
be
first
users
of
the
scienKfic
knowledge
being
produced.
3. Natural
experiments
in
real-‐world.
An
alternaKve
to
virtual
labs
and
to
byassed
populaKons
in
social
experiments.
4. Clear
definiKon
of
the
quesKon.
Appealing
concept:
ParKcipants
are
curious!
5. Time
and
space
frames
controlled
since
it
is
a
one-‐shot
experiment.
6. Light
infraestructure
easy
to
adapt
to
several
contexts.
Always
expect
the
uncertain.
7. Quick
and
flexible
configuraKon
of
teams
(but
large
and
complex
to
manage).
Joint
work
with
I.
Bonhoure,
O.
Sagarra
and
M.
GuKérrez-‐Roig
32. Shaping
a
solu8on:
the
Pop-‐Up
Experiments
Joint
work
with
I.
Bonhoure,
O.
Sagarra
and
M.
GuKérrez-‐Roig
33. Joint
work
on
I.
Bonhoure,
O.
Sagarra
and
M.
GuKérrez-‐Roig
Shaping
a
solu8on:
the
Pop-‐Up
Experiments
34. Joint
work
on
I.
Bonhoure,
O.
Sagarra
and
M.
GuKérrez-‐Roig
Shaping
a
solu8on:
the
Pop-‐Up
Experiments
35. Joint
work
on
I.
Bonhoure,
O.
Sagarra
and
M.
GuKérrez-‐Roig
36. With
the
support
of
Community
of
pracKce
in
CiKzen
Science
CiKzen
Science
Office.
Science
Unit
in
the
City
Council
Science
CommunicaKon
in
Bee-‐Path
and
Complexity
Lab
Barcelona
(2014
SGR
608)
Mecánica
estadísKca
para
"big
data”:
adquisición,
análisis
y
modelización
(FIS2013-‐47532-‐C03-‐02-‐P)
HosKng
the
experiments.
Barcelona
InsKtute
of
Culture
Josep.perello@ub.edu
@JosPerello
@OpenSystemsUB
@CLabBarcelona
Big
thanks
to:
Isabelle
Bonhoure,
Mario
GuKérrez-‐Roig,
Anxo
Sánchez,
Yamir
Moreno,
Jordi
Duch,
Inés
Garriga,
Nadala
Fernández,
Fran
Iglesias,
Pedro
Lorente,
Carlota
Segura,
Clàudia
Payrató,
Joan
Bernat
Ferrer,
DomesKc
Data
Streamers,
Oscar
Marín,
Outliers,
Albert
Díaz-‐Guilera,
Oleguer
Sagarra,
Julia
Poncela-‐Casasnovas,
Jesús
Gómez-‐
Gardeñes,
Julian
Vicens,
Roi
Sastre,
Helena
Andrés,
Edouard
Cabay,
Elena
Poropat,
and
to
thousands
of
volunteers.