We are very pleased to welcome another new project to Österreich forscht! In a citizen ccience project, the inatura - Erlebnis Naturschau Dornbirn is searching for the garden dormouse in Vorarlberg together with the apodemus institute. More information about the project can be found on the project website on Österreich forscht. Join the research!
Only 4 days left for submitting an abstract to the joint ECSA/ACSC conference in Vienna in April 2024. Find all information here: https://2024.ecsa.ngo/
The deadline for submitting abstracts for the ECSA/ACSC double conference in April 2024 in Vienna is approaching. Contributions can only be submitted until September 30. An extension of this deadline is not possible. We are looking forward to many contributions from all over Europe! Please find all information about the conference on the conference website.
The crowdsourcing project "Viennese playbills 1930-1939" is about the metadata capture of the playbills from the holdings of the Vienna City Library from this period. Previously only organized by theater and not indexed individually, during the project these valuable historical sources will become recorded individually and thus discoverable for all. If you want to know more about this fascinating project, then have a look a the project's website. Join the research!
The Citizen Science project ServeToPe develops methods to better quantify the demand for ecosystem services (ESS) and their availability in a landscape. ServeToPe thus aims to contribute to more sustainable management of ESS and more targeted policies that focus on people's needs.Find our more about this fascinating project on the project's website on Österreich forscht.
Nothing to do next week Wednesday evening (06.09.2023)? Then join us with your friends at our popular Pub Quiz, a pre-event of the European Researchers' Night! All details about the Pub Quiz and the registration link can be found in the related blog post. We look forward to seeing you there!
The new episode of our podcast "Wissen macht Leute" is about the participation initiative "IdeenLauf" in Germany, organized by Wissenschaft im Dialog. Our guests were Martin Gora from Wissenschaft im Dialog and Miriam Schwendtker, who participated as a citizen in the Citizen Panel. Listen in!
The climate crisis repeatedly exposes existing weaknesses in democratic practice.On the one hand, groups that are most affected by the consequences of climate change are often underrepresented in the prevailing political and planning practice. On the other hand, social inequality and the exclusion of people from political decision-making processes increases the loss of trust in political decision-makers and institutions. The new project GUMPI aims to explore possible applications of Citizen Social Science (CSS) in urban development, especially regarding the potential of involving usually underrepresented groups. Interested? Then have a look at the project's website and join the research!
The aim of the new project Urban Heat Stories is to collect personal heat experiences of senior citizens in the area around the Quellenplatz in Vienna's 10th district, because older people are considered particularly vulnerable on hot days. Take a look at the project and join the project!
At the annual platform meeting of Österreich forscht on 1 March 2017, the partners decided to set up a working group on quality criteria for citizen science projects. This became necessary because, due to new funding programmes and the level of awareness of citizen science that has been achieved in the meantime, more and more projects consider themselves as citizen science, which also requested to be included in Österreich forscht. Up to this point, projects were examined by the platform coordinators for consistency with the different definitions of citizen science before they were accepted. In order to create objective, comprehensible and, above all, transparent criteria for the future, the working group for quality criteria was founded. The working group consists of project leaders and partners of Österreich forscht and is headed by Florian Heigl and Daniel Dörler.
In the course of developing quality criteria for citizen science projects at Österreich forscht, it soon became apparent that recommendations for existing and new citizen science projects are needed for certain areas, which project coordinators can use as a guideline. One very important area is legal aspects, which often arise for project coordinators for the first time in the context of citizen science projects. Therefore, the working group on legal aspects in citizen science has developed a recommendations for general legal questions in the context of citizen science projects. The recommendations are based on questions from ongoing projects on Österreich forscht and the input of lawyers who have dealt specifically with this topic.
During the annual platform meeting of the Citizen Science Network Austria on 31.01.2018, the participating partners decided to establish a working group on open biodiversity databases. The following objectives were addressed in the working group: (1) Creation of a questionnaire to help assess the feasibility/meaningfulness of opening specific citizen science biodiversity databases (tested on existing and theoretical projects).(2) An implementation/experience report from an Austrian citizen science project that is opening its biodiversity database.
The open science trainings working group has set itself the goal of promoting the dissemination of Open Science methods and facilitating their implementation in everyday scientific work. Project managers often lack knowledge of specific tools or their application. The training workshops, which are available to all interested parties, follow a “train-the-trainer” approach, where those who complete them should acquire the knowledge needed to then be able to pass on that knowledge of how to use specific tools to others. The goal is to offer discipline-specific training workshops. Workshops are announced on Österreich forscht.
The Working Group "Conference" organizes the annual Austrian Citizen Science Conference. It is composed of the local organization team, which changes every year depending on the conference location, and a team of dedicated individuals, which on the one hand takes care of the scientific support of the conference (i.e. mainly evaluating the incoming contributions for the respective conference), and on the other hand also prepares general documents, which enable a flow of information between the different local organization teams from one year to the next. Thus, the conference working group is a core element in the organization of Austria's largest Citizen Science event.
The working group "Citizen Science at/with schools" was founded during the platform meeting on 26 June 2019 in Obergurgl to bring together the numerous experiences from the cooperation between science and schools. The members of the WG come from research institutions and schools.
The aim of this working group is to develop a strategy including an action plan for the development of the Citizen Science Network Austria and the associated platform Österreich forscht until 2027.