Human values and digital citizen science interactions

•An investigation on the relationship between value orientations and interactions in a year-long citizen science initiative in Finland is presented.•Self-transcendence, security, and openness-to-change values influence the participation and use of digital citizen science tools.•Human values are link...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of human-computer studies 2021-05, Vol.149, p.102605, Article 102605
Hauptverfasser: Palacin, Victoria, Ferrario, Maria Angela, Hsieh, Gary, Knutas, Antti, Wolff, Annika, Porras, Jari
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•An investigation on the relationship between value orientations and interactions in a year-long citizen science initiative in Finland is presented.•Self-transcendence, security, and openness-to-change values influence the participation and use of digital citizen science tools.•Human values are linked to different usage patterns. For instance, those with strong security have shorter, goal-directed interactions with the system. Whereas those with strong openness-to-change interact more frequently with the tools.•Further understanding the influence of human values in digital citizen science is a promising area for future research that could contribute to a) guide the design of incentive mechanisms; b) understand user experiences in online communities, and c) to inform the design and evaluation of digital citizen science technologies. Sustained participation is critical to the success of digital citizen-science initiatives, yet much of the current literature focuses on mapping people’s motives to engage without considering the extent to which participation is sustained over time. We conducted a year-long experimental study (n=85) “in-thewild” to explore the effects of human-value orientations on the use of digital citizen-science tools. Participants took part in both the co-design and use of digital citizen-science tools in Lappeenranta, Finland from 2018–2019. Our statistical analysis finds evidence of relations between value orientations, sustained participation, and the number and quality of digital interactions. Specifically, we find that value orientations are linked with different usage patterns. For instance, people with a stronger openness-to-change (OTC) values tended to use the mobile application to check others’ submissions, even when they had nothing to submit, whereas people with stronger security values mostly used the application when they had something relevant to submit. Further understanding the influence of human values in digital citizen science is a promising area for future research that could contribute to a) guide the design of incentive mechanisms, b) understand user experiences in online communities, and c) inform the design and evaluation of digital citizen-science technologies.
ISSN:1071-5819
1095-9300
DOI:10.1016/j.ijhcs.2021.102605