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  2. Crowdsourced psychological science - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crowdsourced_psychological...

    For example, in psychology, scientific research has often been limited by small sample sizes and a lack of diversity in studied populations. [2] These limits can be tackled with a more collaborative approach of scientific research (i.e., crowdsourced science).

  3. List of crowdsourcing projects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_crowdsourcing_projects

    TopCoder is a crowdsourcing company with a global community of designers, developers, data scientists, and competitive programmers who compete to develop the best solutions for Topcoder customers. Organizations like IBM, Honeywell, and NASA work with Topcoder to accelerate innovation, increase bandwidth, and tap into hard-to-find expertise. [110]

  4. Crowdsourcing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crowdsourcing

    Contemporary crowdsourcing often involves digital platforms to attract and divide work between participants to achieve a cumulative result. Crowdsourcing is not limited to online activity, however, and there are various historical examples of crowdsourcing. The word crowdsourcing is a portmanteau of "crowd" and "outsourcing".

  5. Crowd psychology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crowd_psychology

    Crowd psychology (or mob psychology) is a subfield of social psychology which examines how the psychology of a group of people differs from the psychology of any one person within the group. The study of crowd psychology looks into the actions and thought processes of both the individual members of the crowd and of the crowd as a collective ...

  6. Collective intelligence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collective_intelligence

    For example, ideas on solving a data science problem (as in Kaggle) or getting a good design for a T-shirt (as in Threadless) or in getting answers to simple problems that only humans can do well (as in Amazon's Mechanical Turk). The objective is to gather the ideas and devise some selection criteria to choose the best ideas.

  7. Crowdcasting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crowdcasting

    InnoCentive is an example; its challenges tap into a community of over 100,000 scientists who might provide that unexpected innovation. Openpitch.com [1] an upstart, has embraced the concept of crowdcasting to form a virtual advertising agency. The fundamental concept of crowdcasting—harnessing a specific, often expert, community of ...

  8. InnoCentive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/InnoCentive

    InnoCentive is an open innovation and crowdsourcing company with its worldwide headquarters in Waltham, MA and their EMEA headquarters in London, UK.They enable organizations to put their unsolved problems and unmet needs, which are framed as ‘Challenges’, out to the crowd to address. [1]

  9. Crowd computing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crowd_computing

    Crowd computing is a form of distributed work where tasks that are hard for computers to do, are handled by large numbers of humans distributed across the internet.. It is an overarching term encompassing tools that enable idea sharing, non-hierarchical decision making and utilization of "cognitive surplus" - the ability of the world’s population to collaborate on large, sometimes global ...