How Networks of Citizen Observatories Can Increase the Quality and Quantity of Citizen-Science-Generated Data Used to Monitor SDG Indicators
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- data quality, by simplifying expert verification, or using AI to improve identification;
- data interoperability, by facilitating integration between data sets;
- data accessibility, by processing data so they can be more easily uploaded to the European Open Science Cloud [17] ensuring open access;
- the sustainability and maintenance of citizen observatories, for example, through low-cost tools that can be used, adapted and replicated.
- by capitalising on the interoperability of data, which will lead to larger, integrated and more useful data sets;
- by building on co-design approaches, involving and combining the citizens’ and researchers’ experience and expertise throughout the project’s life cycle;
- by feeding and supporting the education and learning experience of building on, participating in and contributing to sustainable development and global citizenship (which is the focus of SDG 4.7, as well as a cross-cutting theme across all SDGs).
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Citizen Observatories: Opportunities to Support the SDGs
2.2. Limitations of the Citizen Observatory Method
2.3. The Cos4Cloud Methodology for Improving Citizen Observatory Networks
3. Results
3.1. How Cos4Cloud Improves Interoperability: AI-Based Plant Identification through Pl@ntNet
3.1.1. Pl@ntNet Identification as a Service
3.1.2. Pl@ntNet Research-Grade Data
3.2. How Cos4Cloud Enables Citizen Observatories to Support Education and Learning
4. Discussion
4.1. Citizen Observatory Networks for Society
4.2. Citizen Observatory Networks for Policy
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Functionality | Description | Added Value | Example |
Set-valued species classification | The service returns a list of species corresponding to the query, each associated with a probability output by the deep learning model. | The probability output allows for better quality control in the downstream applications provided to end users. | An application may suggest to its end users to re-submit a better-quality photo if the confidence score returned for identification is too low. If the confidence score is very high, it can automatically record the observation for the end user. |
Flora selection(optional) | This option allows the returned species to be filtered according to a given flora (among 41 possible floras at the time of writing). | The identification quality is improved, and the service can be more easily customised for specific use cases. | An application will not display a visually similar species for a given identification request (of the same genus, for example) if the species is not within the selected flora. |
Similarity search | For each recognised species, the service returns the closest pictures to the query in the Pl@ntNet database. | This allows better quality control of the identification by the end user. It also provides access to Pl@ntNet images to illustrate the species. | Application developers do not have to manage visual data to illustrate the identified species and can benefit from the data shared by Pl@ntNet. |
Multi-images and multi-organ observations | Several pictures of the same individual plant can be provided as input of the service (particularly photos of the different organs, including the flower, the fruit or the leaf). | The identification quality is improved, and the service can be more easily customised for specific use cases. | A biodiversity monitoring app can be used whatever the season or the phenological stage of the plant. |
Key Features | Description | Added Value | Example |
Regularly updated and enriched identification model | Pl@ntNet’s AI model used for the identification service is regularly updated based on the collaboratively revised Pl@ntNet database and research progress. | The identification quality is regularly improved, and the number of recognised species increases. | Newly identified species are rapidly recognisable by other users |
Automated rejection of inappropriate content | Any picture of non-plant entities is automatically tagged as “Reject”. | Inappropriate content can be filtered before it enters the data flow of the downstream applications (database, app screens, etc.). | This feature facilitates the integration of the service into educational applications, ensuring the identification of only visual plant data. |
API dashboard and documentation | The website my.plantnet.org provides rich documentation of the service as well as a dashboard allowing the users to follow its usage of the service. | Developers can easily integrate the service into downstream applications and monitor their usage. | An application using this service can monitor its consumption of the service in terms of number of queries per day, week, month, etc. |
Quality of Service | Description | Added Value | Example |
Non-regression tests of the identification quality | The quality of the identification is measured on several benchmarks before each model’s update. | The user has the guarantee that the identification quality is not degrading. | An application using this service can enrich the amount of information on each new identifiable species, these species being always identifiable in future versions of the recognition model. |
Quality of service monitoring | The quality of service is monitored continuously based on several criteria (status, response time and scalability) and an alert system allows the developers to react quickly. | Service downtime is limited. | An application using this service can use it at any time. |
Secured access with an API key | The use of the service requires a token provided at account creation (with email validation). | This highly limits the risk of attacks. | This limits the risk of denial of service attacks. |
Scalability | Pl@ntNet’s infrastructure and data management software are highly scalable. | Developers of downstream applications do not have to manage the workload themselves. | A third-party application can have a peak in usage or a large increase in users without causing the service to slow down. |
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Woods, S.M.; Daskolia, M.; Joly, A.; Bonnet, P.; Soacha, K.; Liñan, S.; Woods, T.; Piera, J.; Ceccaroni, L. How Networks of Citizen Observatories Can Increase the Quality and Quantity of Citizen-Science-Generated Data Used to Monitor SDG Indicators. Sustainability 2022, 14, 4078. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14074078
Woods SM, Daskolia M, Joly A, Bonnet P, Soacha K, Liñan S, Woods T, Piera J, Ceccaroni L. How Networks of Citizen Observatories Can Increase the Quality and Quantity of Citizen-Science-Generated Data Used to Monitor SDG Indicators. Sustainability. 2022; 14(7):4078. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14074078
Chicago/Turabian StyleWoods, Sasha Marie, Maria Daskolia, Alexis Joly, Pierre Bonnet, Karen Soacha, Sonia Liñan, Tim Woods, Jaume Piera, and Luigi Ceccaroni. 2022. "How Networks of Citizen Observatories Can Increase the Quality and Quantity of Citizen-Science-Generated Data Used to Monitor SDG Indicators" Sustainability 14, no. 7: 4078. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14074078