It is estimated that around 14 million people worldwide are involved in citizen science, which enables non-scientists to participate in various research projects. Although citizen science is rapidly gaining popularity worldwide, experts note that in Lithuania, people’s involvement in research remains low.
People can participate in research in various ways, for example, by using apps to record sources of air pollution or invasive species in the city. According to Ineta Simonaitė, a doctoral student in sociology at the Faculty of Social Sciences, Humanities and Arts at Kaunas University of Technology, this allows scientists and municipal representatives to make decisions on environmental and other important issues more quickly.
“People’s interest in research is not particularly high, so it is important to understand what factors would encourage them to join the surveys and become a significant part of science,” says Simonaitė.
Benefits for the people themselves
The factors determining public involvement in science can be external or internal. Simonaitė emphasises that citizen science is unique in that by participating in research, people can both contribute to scientific solutions and receive real benefits – new knowledge, connections, experience, and recognition, and most importantly, solve problems that are relevant to them.
