Title
Accounting for Privacy in Citizen Science: Ethical Research in a Context of Openness.
Abstract
In citizen science, volunteers collect and share data with researchers, other volunteers, and the public at large. Data shared in citizen science includes information on volunteer location or other sensitive personal information; yet, volunteers do not typically express privacy concerns. This study uses the framework of contextual integrity to understand privacy accounting in the context of citizen science, by analyzing contextual variables including roles; information types; data flows and transmission principles; and, uses, norms, and values. Findings show that uses, norms, and values-including core values shared by researchers and public volunteers, and the motivations of individual volunteers' have a significant impact on privacy accounting. Overall, citizen science volunteers and practitioners share and promote openness and data sharing over protecting privacy. Studying the context of citizen science offers an example of contextually-appropriate data sharing that can inform broader questions about research ethics in an age of pervasive data. Based on these findings, this paper offers implications for designing data and information flows and supporting technologies in public and voluntary data sharing projects.
Year
DOI
Venue
2017
10.1145/2998181.2998305
CSCW
Keywords
Field
DocType
Citizen science, crowdsourcing, research ethics, privacy, open data, contextual integrity, digital volunteers
Research ethics,Accounting,Open data,Internet privacy,Privacy by Design,Computer science,Crowdsourcing,Data sharing,Knowledge management,Personally identifiable information,Citizen science,Information privacy
Conference
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
3
0.44
21
Authors
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Anne Bowser171.61
Katie Shilton276351.86
Jenny Preece351.28
Elizabeth E. Warrick452.30