Simon Hoyte
University College London
5 Papers
1 Citations
Simon Hoyte is an academic researcher from University College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Citizen science & Stakeholder analysis. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 5 publications.
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Papers
The Value of Stakeholder Mapping to Enhance Co-Creation in Citizen Science Initiatives
Artemis Skarlatidou,Monika Suškevičs,Claudia Göbel,Baiba Prūse,Loreta Tauginienė,André Mascarenhas,Marzia Mazzonetto,Alice Sheppard,Judy Barrett,Muki Haklay,Avinoam Baruch,Elina-Aikaterini Moraitopoulou,Kat Austen,Imane Baïz,Aleksandra Berditchevskaia,Eszter Berényi,Simon Hoyte,Lotte Kleijssen,Gitte Kragh,Martine Legris,Alicia Mansilla-Sanchez,Christian Nold,Michalis Vitos,Paweł Wyszomirski +23 more
- 19 Aug 2019
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present and discuss findings from an international two-day stakeholder mapping workshop with researchers, event organizers, communication experts, and artists realizing citizen science activities, and argue that a better understanding of stakeholder involvement may contribute to more effective stakeholder communication, more successful implementation, and a greater impact for citizen science initiatives.
Using Sapelli in the Field: Methods and Data for an Inclusive Citizen Science
F. Moustard,Muki Haklay,J. D. Lewis,Alexandra Albert,Marcos Moreu,Rafael Morais Chiaravalloti,Rafael Morais Chiaravalloti,Simon Hoyte,Artemis Skarlatidou,Alice Vittoria,Carolina Comandulli,Emmanuel Nyadzi,Michalis Vitos,Julia Altenbuchner,Megan Laws,Raffaella Fryer-Moreira,Daniel Artus +16 more
TL;DR: The Sapelli smartphone application as discussed by the authors aims to support any community to engage in citizen science activities to address local concerns and needs, but it is not designed as a piece of technology without a context, but as the technical part of a socio-technical approach to establish a participatory science process.
Contemporaneity and entanglement: Archaeological site structure from a Bayesian perspective
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors rephrase the question from "at what age did this seal (these seals) die" to "which month or months most effectively characterize the likely capture (death) date for this set of seals" by shifting focus from 'age at death' to'month of death' and use contemporaneity of linked seal deaths at sites as a form of prior knowledge to inform predictions of season of visit.
2
Ethical considerations when conservation research involves people.
Stephanie Brittain,Stephanie Brittain,Harriet Ibbett,Harriet Ibbett,Emiel de Lange,Leejiah J. Dorward,Leejiah J. Dorward,Simon Hoyte,Agnese Marino,Agnese Marino,E. J. Milner-Gulland,Julia L. Newth,Julia L. Newth,Sarobidy O. Rakotonarivo,Diogo Veríssimo,J. D. Lewis +15 more
TL;DR: This work discusses ethical review procedures, conflicts of values, and power relations, and provides broad recommendations on how to navigate ethical challenges when they arise during research, to highlight the pressing need to develop ethical guidelines for conservation research that involves human participants.
Ethnobiology Phase VI: Decolonizing Institutions, Projects, and Scholarship
Alex C. McAlvay,Chelsey Geralda Armstrong,Janelle Marie Baker,Linda Black Elk,Samantha Bosco,Natalia Hanazaki,Leigh Joseph,Tania Eulalia Martinez-Cruz,Mark Nesbitt,Meredith Alberta Palmer,Walderes Cocta Priprá De Almeida,Jane Anderson,Zemede Asfaw,Israel T. Borokini,Eréndira Juanita Cano-Contreras,Simon Hoyte,Maui Hudson,Ana Haydee Ladio,Guillaume Odonne,Sonia Peter,John Rashford,Jeffrey Wall,Steve Wolverton,Ina Vandebroek +23 more
TL;DR: The authors argue that ethnobiology should move toward a sixth phase in which scholars and practitioners must actively challenge colonialism, racism, and oppressive structures embedded within their institutions, projects, and themselves.