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Crowdsourcing for Bioinformatics

Motivation: Bioinformatics is faced with a variety of problems that require human involvement. Tasks like genome annotation, image analysis, knowledge-base construction and protein structure determination all benefit from human input. In some cases people are needed in vast quantities while in others we need just a few with very rare abilities. Crowdsourcing encompasses an emerging collection of approaches for harnessing such distributed human intelligence. Recently, the bioinformatics community has begun to apply crowdsourcing in a variety of contexts, yet few resources are available that describe how these human-powered systems work and how to use them effectively in scientific domains. Results: Here, we provide a framework for understanding and applying several different types of crowdsourcing. The framework considers two broad classes: systems for solving large-volume 'microtasks' and systems for solving high-difficulty 'megatasks'. Within these classes, we discuss system types including: volunteer labor, games with a purpose, microtask markets and open innovation contests. We illustrate each system type with successful examples in bioinformatics and conclude wi

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Related contextCo-authorshipRelated contextRelated contextAuthorshipAuthorshipTopic signalTopic signalTopic signalTopic signalRelated contextWCrowdsourcing for Bioinformaticspreprint / 2013ABenjamin M. GoodResearcherAAndrew I. SuResearcherTcs.CY4196 worksTSocial and Information ...3519 worksTphysics.soc-ph3139 worksTQuantitative Methods1848 works
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Crowdsourcing for Bioinformatics

preprint / 2013

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