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A list of all pages that have property "Has project description" with value "Transcribing museum records to obtain historical biospanersity data.". Since there have been only a few results, also nearby values are displayed.

Showing below up to 5 results starting with #1.

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List of results

  • Test4Theory  + (The LHC@home 2.0 project Test4Theory allows users to participate in running simulations of high-energy particle physics using their home computers.)
  • WhaleFM  + (The WhaleFM project ask participants to heThe WhaleFM project ask participants to help classifying calls of Whales, i.e. find close matching pairs of calls.</br></br>According to [http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/at-scientific-american/2012/04/19/whale-fm-where-citizen-science-whale-songs-and-education-come-together/ Mariette DiChristina], Whale.FM—a collaborative effort of Scientific American, Zooniverse and the research institutions WHOI, TNO, the University of Oxford and SMRU—lets citizen scientists help marine researchers who are studying what whales are saying.s who are studying what whales are saying.)
  • WideNoise  + (There are various kinds of pollution that There are various kinds of pollution that get often on the first page of newspapers. Noise pollution instead is rarely cited, but it's something that constantly surrounds us even if we are not aware of. WideNoise will help you to better understand the soundscape around you & live a healthier life. ([http://cs.everyaware.eu/event/widenoise/ Ever heard of sound pollution?] (Nov. 6, 2013)Ever heard of sound pollution?] (Nov. 6, 2013))
  • Citizen science project test  + (This is just a project description that can be used for testing .... At some point it will be removed....)
  • Transcribe Bentham  + (Transcribe Bentham is a an award-winning pTranscribe Bentham is a an award-winning participatory project based at University College London. Its aim is to engage the public in the online transcription of original and unstudied manuscript papers written by Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832), the great philosopher and reformer, via a transcription interface based on a customised [[MediaWiki]]. </br>"Transcribe Bentham emerged out of initial discussions between Professor Philip Schofield, the Director of the Bentham Project, and Martin Moyle of UCL Library Services, regarding the production of a digital Bentham resource for a forthcoming Arts and Humanities Research Council funding call. Martin proposed the establishment of a resource to facilitate crowdsourced transcription of the Bentham Papers, and a potential partnership between the Bentham Project, UCL Library Services, UCL’s Centre for Digital Humanities, and the University of London Computer Centre. After an initial meeting between Professor Schofield, Martin, Dr Melissa Terras (UCL DH), and Richard Davis (ULCC), hosted by Library Services, the project consortium was formed."(About Us, official project page) formed."(About Us, official project page))
  • Notes from Nature  + (Transcribing museum records to obtain historical biodiversity data.)
  • Worm Watch Lab  + (We need the public’s help in observing theWe need the public’s help in observing the behaviour of tiny nematode worms. When you classify on wormwatchlab.org you’re shown a video of a worm wriggling around. The aim of the game is to watch and wait for the worm to lay eggs, and to hit the ‘z’ key when they do.eggs, and to hit the ‘z’ key when they do.)
  • The Milky Way Project  + (We're asking you to help us find and draw circles on infrared image data from the Spitzer Space Telescope. Understanding the material that we see in these images helps scientists to learn how stars form and how our galaxy changes and evolves with time.)
  • GeoTag-X  + ([http://geotagx.org/ GeoTag-X] is an open [http://geotagx.org/ GeoTag-X] is an open source platform set up by [http://www.unitar.org/unosat/ UNITAR-UNOSAT] within [http://citizencyberlab.org/ Citizen Cyberlab] to engage and educate volunteers all around the world in analysing media coming out of humanitarian crises and natural disasters. GeoTag-X aims to produce datasets that can be used in relief and recovery efforts by humanitarian and disaster response agencies, both within and outside the United Nations system. </br></br></br>Large quantities of media, including photos and videos, are often generated during disasters and humanitarian operations. UNITAR-UNOSAT believes this media can complement existing efforts at gathering data to summarize disaster impacts and humanitarian response. With the GeoTag-X platform, we seek to gather all the relevant media coming out of a disaster situation or humanitarian operations, and to crowdsource analysis of that media so it can be used by the international community.</br></br>GeoTag-X is built on the open source [http://pybossa.com/ PyBossa] and all code developed for GeoTag-X is made available on [https://github.com/geotagx GitHub]. </br>GeoTag-X currently hosts 14 projects covering various disaster-related topics. Some of these were simply developed as test cases as we implemented new ideas and code, and almost all of them have been developed in collaboration with external organizations and agencies such as the [http://www.reach-initiative.org/ REACH Initiative], [http://www.fao.org/somalia/en/ UNFAO Somalia], and Yamuna’s Daughter, a project by [http://womenforsustainablecities.org/ Women for Sustainable Cities].cities.org/ Women for Sustainable Cities].)
  • ReCaptcha  + (reCAPTCHA is a user-dialogue system originreCAPTCHA is a user-dialogue system originally developed by Luis von Ahn, Ben Maurer, Colin McMillen, David Abraham and Manuel Blum at Carnegie Mellon University's main Pittsburgh campus, and acquired by Google in September 2009. Like the CAPTCHA interface, reCAPTCHA asks users to enter words seen in distorted text images onscreen. By presenting two words it both protects websites from bots attempting to access restricted areas and helps digitize the text of books. The reCAPTCHA service supplies subscribing websites with images of words that optical character recognition (OCR) software has been unable to read. The subscribing websites (whose purposes are generally unrelated to the book digitization project) present these images for humans to decipher as CAPTCHA words, as part of their normal validation procedures. They then return the results to the reCAPTCHA service, which sends the results to the digitization projects. the results to the digitization projects.)