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Abstract The bulk of research on citizen science participants is project centric, based on an assumption that volunteers experience a single project. Contrary to this assumption, survey responses (n = 3894) and digital trace data (n = 3649) from volunteers, who collectively engaged in 1126 unique projects, revealed that multiproject participation was the norm. Only 23% of volunteers were singletons (who participated in only one project). The remaining multiproject participants were split evenly between discipline specialists (39%) and discipline spanners (38% joined projects with different disciplinary topics) and unevenly between mode specialists (52%) and mode spanners (25% participated in online and offline projects). Public engagement was narrow: The multiproject participants were eight times more likely to be White and five times more likely to hold advanced degrees than the general population. We propose a volunteer-centric framework that explores how the dynamic accumulation of experiences in a project ecosystem can support broad learning objectives and inclusive citizen science.more » « less
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Smith, Haley; Allf, Bradley; Larson, Lincoln; Futch, Sara; Lundgren, Lisa; Pacifici, Lara; Cooper, Caren (, Citizen Science: Theory and Practice)
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Larson, Lincoln R.; Cooper, Caren B.; Futch, Sara; Singh, Devyani; Shipley, Nathan J.; Dale, Kathy; LeBaron, Geoffrey S.; Takekawa, John Y. (, Biological Conservation)null (Ed.)
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