Showing posts with label #Crowdsourcing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #Crowdsourcing. Show all posts

Friday, November 22, 2024

🌋 IMSPARK: Community Insights Driving Safer Volcano Monitoring🌋

🌋 Imagine... Community Insights Driving Safer Volcano Monitoring🌋

💡 Imagined Endstate

A future where Pacific communities actively contribute to volcanic monitoring, enhancing safety and resilience through shared knowledge and advanced science.

🔗 Link

Crowdsourcing Human Observations Expands and Enhances Volcano Monitoring Records

📚 Source

Clive, M.A.T., Lawson, R.V., Lamb, O.D., et al. (2024). Crowdsourcing human observations expands and enhances volcano monitoring records. Commun Earth Environ, 5(599). https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-024-01747-3

💥 What’s the Big Deal

Crowdsourcing human observations has revolutionized volcano monitoring, offering vital real-time data that enhances traditional scientific methods 🔬. By integrating local insights, the study shows how diverse observations provide a richer, more accurate understanding of volcanic activity 📐 For Pacific nations, home to numerous active volcanoes, this approach offers a powerful tool for early warning systems and disaster mitigation🌀. Engaging communities not only boosts data collection but also fosters trust and collaboration between scientists and residents 🤝. This innovative strategy strengthens resilience, safeguarding lives and livelihoods in regions prone to volcanic risks.


#VolcanoMonitoring, #Crowdsourcing, #PacificResilience, #CommunityScience, #DisasterPreparedness, #CivicEngagement, #Innovation, #CommunityEmpowerment, #IMSPARK,



Thursday, January 11, 2024

📱 IMSPARK: Social Media and Crowdsourcing Can Boost Disaster Resilience in the Pacific 📱

📱 Imagine… Social Media and Crowdsourcing Can Boost Disaster Resilience in the Pacific 📱



💡 Imagined Endstate: 

Imagine a future where Pacific communities and organizations can leverage the power of social media and crowdsourcing to enhance their disaster risk management processes. 

🔗Link: 


📚Source: 

Links Consortium. (2021). Social media and crowdsourcing for disaster risk management and resilience: A European perspective.

💥 What’s the Big Deal:

Social media and crowdsourcing are innovative ways of using online platforms and tools to collect, organize, analyze, and share data and information from various sources, such as citizens, experts, or sensors. Social media and crowdsourcing can help improve disaster resilience in the Pacific by providing early warning systems, situation awareness, public engagement, feedback mechanisms, and learning opportunities. 🌏 The Pacific region is highly exposed and vulnerable to natural hazards, such as cyclones, floods, earthquakes, and volcanic eruptions, which can cause devastating human, economic, and environmental losses. Social media and crowdsourcing can help reduce these losses by enhancing information access, decision-making capabilities, and stakeholder participation in disaster risk management. 🚨 Social media and crowdsourcing can also help create a culture of disaster preparedness and resilience in the Pacific. However, there are also challenges and barriers to implementing social media and crowdsourcing in disaster risk management, such as cooperation, digital literacy, citizen inclusion, data quality, privacy, and ethics. 💪Therefore, there is a need for guidance, best practices, and resources to support the effective and responsible use of social media and crowdsourcing in disaster risk management.


#Crowdsourcing,#socialmedia,#Pacific,#DRR,#SocialCapital,#IMSPARK

🌡️IMSPARK: Protecting Hearts During Heatwaves🌡️

 🌡️Imagine... Protecting Hearts During Heatwaves🌡️ 💡 Imagined Endstate :  A future where individuals across the globe, especially in vuln...