Working with a new kind of team: harnessing the wisdom of the crowd in trial identification

被引:7
|
作者
Noel-Storr, Anna [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Oxford, Cochrane Dementia & Cognit Improvement Grp, Oxford, England
关键词
crowdsourcing; citizen science; meta-analysis; systematic review; randomised controlled trial; microtask;
D O I
10.2903/j.efsa.2019.e170715
中图分类号
TS2 [食品工业];
学科分类号
0832 ;
摘要
Background: At a time when research output is expanding exponentially, citizen science, the process of engaging willing volunteers in scientific research activities, has an important role to play in helping to manage the information overload. It also creates a model of contribution that enables anyone with an interest in health to contribute meaningfully and in a way that is flexible. Citizen science models have been shown to be extremely effective in other domains such as astronomy and ecology. Methods: Cochrane Crowd (crowd. cochrane.org) is a citizen science platform that offers contributors a range of microtasks, designed to help identify and describe health research. The platform enables contributors to dive into needed tasks that capture and describe health evidence. Brief interactive training modules and agreement algorithms help to ensure accurate collective decision making. Contributors can work online or offline; they can view their activity and performance in detail. They can choose to work in topic areas of interest to them such dementia or diabetes, and as contributors progress, they unlock milestone rewards and new tasks. Cochrane Crowd was launched in May 2016. It now hosts a range of microtasks which help to identify health evidence and then describe it according to a PICO (Population; Intervention; Comparator; Outcome) ontology. The microtasks are either at 'citation level' in which a contributor is presented with a title and abstract to classify or annotate, or at the full-text level in which a whole or a portion of a full paper is displayed. Results: To date (March 2019), the Cochrane Crowd community comprises over 12,000 contributors from more than 180 countries. Almost 3 million individual classifications have been made, and around 70,000 reports of randomised trials have been identified for Cochrane's Central Register of Controlled Trials. Performance evaluations to assess crowd accuracy have shown crowd sensitivity is 99.1%, and crowd specificity is 99%. Main motivations for involvement are that people want to help Cochrane, and people want to learn. Conclusion: This model of contribution is now an established part of Cochrane's effort to manage the deluge of information produced in a way that offers contributors a chance to get involved, learn and play a crucial role in evidence production. Our experience has shown that people want to be involved and that, with little or no prior experience, can do certain tasks to a very high degree of collective accuracy. Using a citizen science approach effectively has enabled Cochrane to better support its expert community through better use of human effort. It has also generated large, high-quality data sets on a scale not carried out before which has provided training material for machine learning routines. Citizen science is not an easy option, but performed well it brings a wealth of advantages to both the citizen and the organisation. (C) 2019 European Food Safety Authority. EFSA Journal published by John Wiley and Sons Ltd on behalf of European Food Safety Authority.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Experiences of Swedish husband-wife team working in Asia -: A whole new, stimulating view of life
    Sandström, DA
    SVENSK PAPPERSTIDNING-NORDISK CELLULOSA, 2000, 103 (04): : 33 - 34
  • [42] Implications of daily, monthly and seasonal variation of new referrals for working patterns of a community mental health team
    Shah, Ajit
    Padayatchi, Mellisha
    INTERNATIONAL PSYCHOGERIATRICS, 2006, 18 (04) : 754 - 755
  • [43] Understanding the effect of boundary spanning activities on team identification in new product development teams
    Carbonell, Pilar
    Escudero, Ana I. Rodriguez
    BRQ-BUSINESS RESEARCH QUARTERLY, 2025, 28 (01) : 236 - 251
  • [44] Once-a-week psychiatric ward round or daily inpatient team meeting? A multidisciplinary mental health team's experience of new ways of working
    Fiddler, Magdalen
    Borglin, Gunilla
    Galloway, Adrian
    Jackson, Carl
    McGowan, Linda
    Lovell, Karina
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH NURSING, 2010, 19 (02) : 119 - 127
  • [46] Harnessing new mHealth technologies to Strengthen the Management of Multidrug-Resistant Tuberculosis in Vietnam (V-SMART trial): a protocol for a randomised controlled trial
    Velen, Kavindhran
    Nguyen, Viet Nhung
    Nguyen, Binh Hoa
    Dang, Tho
    Nguyen, Hoang Anh
    Vu, Dinh Hoa
    Do, Thu Thuong
    Pham Duc, Cuong
    Nguyen, Huu Lan
    Pham, Huu Thuong
    Marais, Ben J.
    Johnston, James
    Britton, Warwick
    Beardsley, Justin
    Negin, Joel
    Wiseman, Virginia
    Marks, Guy Barrington
    Nguyen, Thu Anh
    Fox, Greg J.
    BMJ OPEN, 2022, 12 (06):
  • [47] A NEW TRIAL FOR THE IDENTIFICATION OF CELLS IN BONE REMODELING SITES OF MOUSE CALVARIAE
    SO, S
    TAKAHASHI, T
    TAKAHASHI, K
    JOURNAL OF DENTAL RESEARCH, 1987, 66 : 251 - 251
  • [48] Harnessing slow event-related fMRI to investigate trial-level brain-behavior relationships during object identification
    Gotts, Stephen J.
    Gilmore, Adrian W.
    Martin, Alex
    FRONTIERS IN HUMAN NEUROSCIENCE, 2024, 18
  • [49] What kind of goods are plant genetic resources for food and agriculture? Towards the identification and development of a new global commons
    Halewood, Michael
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF THE COMMONS, 2013, 7 (02): : 278 - 312
  • [50] WORKING IN AN INTERDISCIPLINARY TEAM: A COLLABORATIVE APPROACH TO USING EVIDENCE-BASED IDENTIFICATION AND TREATMENT OF TRAUMA-RELATED STRESS AND ANXIETY DISORDERS
    Volpe, Kelley A.
    Cox, Lauren E.
    Suarez, Liza M.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY, 2019, 58 (10): : S380 - S380