Abstract
Data on the quality of small-scale infrastructure assets at the neighborhood level tend to be scarce, delayed, or even nonexistent, limiting the ability of local communities to better manage assets, identify risks, and improve performance. Participatory methods, common in ecology and environmental science, provide an opportunity for producing these fine data. However, very little is known about the validity and reliability of infrastructure data collected by volunteer members of the public. In this paper, we examine the validity and reliability of local drainage infrastructure monitoring data obtained from citizen scientists. The volunteer citizen scientists were high school students collecting data about the condition of stormwater infrastructure in their local community. The study took place in an environmental justice neighborhood in Houston with a long history of flooding and exposure to environmental hazards. The results suggest that with adequate planning, training, and organized community engagement efforts, the validity and reliability of data collected by citizen scientists can be comparable to physical measurements and data obtained from trained inspectors.
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©2019 American Society of Civil Engineers.
History
Received: Jun 12, 2018
Accepted: Dec 18, 2018
Published online: Apr 25, 2019
Published in print: Sep 1, 2019
Discussion open until: Sep 25, 2019
ASCE Technical Topics:
- Asset management
- Business management
- Data collection
- Drainage
- Engineering fundamentals
- Engineering profession
- Financial management
- Information management
- Infrastructure
- Infrastructure vulnerability
- Irrigation engineering
- Methodology (by type)
- Practice and Profession
- Professional development
- Research methods (by type)
- Residential location
- Urban and regional development
- Urban areas
- Volunteerism
- Water and water resources
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