REINFORCE will be monitoring the impact of the project, identifying enablers and barriers for the development of new knowledge and innovations by citizen scientists.
REINFORCE aims to extend the senses used in the scientific inference, including sense-disabled people and senior citizens, by providing them with tools and training to overcome specific barriers.
Jacques Marteau teaches us how a technology developed to study fundamental physics can be applied to the development of frameworks that may have a significant impact on society.
Francesco Mureddu, Director of the Lisbon Council, claims that we need to get people closer to science, showing them that anyone who has a strong motivation can give a tangible contribution to it.
REINFORCE will be forging sturdy connections with successful frontier citizen science projects. To do so, it will be capitalizing on the experience of the Open University, among the others.
REINFORCE will rely on Zooniverse, known as the world’s largest platform for online citizen science, as the platform on top of which it will build its infrastructure and engage with its community.
Paschal Coyle explains how the Deep-Sea Hunter’s citizen science demonstrator will be exploiting the “eyes” and the “ears” of the KM3NeT detector.
Understanding volunteers’ motivations for participating in citizen science projects is essential in order to plan these projects and to reach a high level of citizen engagement.
The Large Scale Citizen Science demonstrators are the key vehicle that REINFORCE will utilize in order to bring frontier science and society together.
Nowadays, research in fundamental Physics progresses through international collaborations that design and operate highly sophisticated, usually public funded, Large Research Infrastructures.
REINFORCE Project was officially launched with its kick-off meeting held on 8th-9th December 2019 at the European Gravitational Observatory (EGO), coordinating partner.