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      Coercion, Consent, and Participation in Citizen Science

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          Abstract

          Throughout history, everyday people have contributed to science through a myriad of volunteer activities. This early participation required training and often involved mentorship from scientists or senior citizen scientists (or, as they were often called, gentleman scientists). During this learning process, participants learned how they and their data would be used both to advance science, and in some cases, advance the careers of professional collaborators. Modern, online citizen science, allows participation with just a few clicks, and people may participate without understanding what they are contributing to. Too often, they happily see what they are doing as the privilege of painting Tom Sawyer's fence without realizing they are actually being used as merely a means to a scientific end. This paper discusses the ethical dilemmas that plague modern citizen science, including: the issues of informed consent, such as not requiring logins; the issues of coercion inherent in mandatory classroom assignments requiring data submission; and the issues of using people merely as a means to an end that are inherent in technonationalism, and projects that do not provide utility to the users beyond the knowledge they helped. This work is tested within the context of astronomy citizen science.

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          Racism and research: the case of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study.

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            Seeking better health care outcomes: the ethics of using the "nudge".

            Policymakers, employers, insurance companies, researchers, and health care providers have developed an increasing interest in using principles from behavioral economics and psychology to persuade people to change their health-related behaviors, lifestyles, and habits. In this article, we examine how principles from behavioral economics and psychology are being used to nudge people (the public, patients, or health care providers) toward particular decisions or behaviors related to health or health care, and we identify the ethically relevant dimensions that should be considered for the utilization of each principle.
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              Informed consent and the Facebook emotional manipulation study

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                28 July 2019
                Article
                1907.13061
                c8a77103-62ac-43cd-ab06-29af616bf763

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

                History
                Custom metadata
                submitted to journal of Science and Engineering Ethics
                cs.CY physics.ed-ph

                General physics,Applied computer science
                General physics, Applied computer science

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