QUESTIONNAIRE FOR CH INSTITUTIONS Sample Clauses

QUESTIONNAIRE FOR CH INSTITUTIONS. An online questionnaire was designed and developed to evaluate the involvement of cultural heritage institutions with projects that involve citizen scientists and, to a lesser extent, crowdsourcing activities. The questionnaire was launched on 4th December 2014 and closed on 22nd December 2014. It attracted 85 responses from 23 countries (19 European, 2 from North America and 2 from Asia). The questionnaire aimed to collect data which would help to get insights into: • the current level of awareness on citizen science in memory institutions; • the patterns of involvement of cultural heritage institutions in citizen science; • the attractiveness factors seen by cultural heritage professionals; • the need of specific tools which facilitate citizen science deployment in this specific setting; • the awareness and interest in using citizen science in domains such as digital cultural content for creativity. There are several aspects of the methodology of this study which deserve a special mention: • The survey explores in parallel citizen science and crowdsourcing. This was a topic discussed at length within the consortium. Taking into account the fact that in many cases there is a confusion between these terms, and also that crowdsourcing gained popularity in the cultural heritage sector, the project decided to make use of both concepts in the survey. • For the first time we are aware of, a survey on citizen science includes questions which allow comparing the outcomes of this questionnaire with previous surveys on citizen science. • The survey also allows comparing the collected data with the outcomes of the focus groups; in this sense, even if it was not included originally in the project workplan, it complements very well the work of WP2 (Requirements gathering) and WP3 (Designing a roadmap). The online questionnaire, which will be presented in more detail in D2.2, confirmed the confusion between citizen science and crowdsourcing and showed a generally positive attitude towards the use of citizen science in the digital cultural heritage sector.
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