Over half of the population of the UK own a smartphone, and about the same number of people uses social media such as Twitter. For the British Geological Survey (BGS) this means millions of potential reporters of real-time events and in-the-field data capturers, creating a new source of scientific information that could help to better understand and predict natural processes
Social media is a transformative digital technology, collapsing the "six degrees of separation" whic...
The Aurorasaurus project harnesses volunteer crowdsourcing to identify sightings of an aurora (the “...
The world of science communication is changing with the increased use of social media and online res...
Social media is increasingly being used to share near-real-time analysis of emergent and sometimes h...
“How far south will the aurora borealis be seen?” is a common question asked when a geomagnetic stor...
Obtaining real-time information about a geohazard event as it unfolds, such as a flood or earthquak...
<p>Presented at the American Geophysical Union Fall 2013 Meeting in San Francisco, California, Dec. ...
The British Geological Survey has a bold new strategy to instrument the earth. What does that mean i...
Problem This dissertation presents a literature-based framework for communication in science (with t...
On March 17, 2015, a geomagnetic storm—the largest of the solar cycle to date— hit Earth and gave ma...
International audienceTwitter is an established social media platform valued by scholars as an open ...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Public Library of Science (PLoS) via the DO...
Applications developed using Web 2.0 technologies, such as social media sites, blogs, wikis etc., h...
Technological advances in GPS, mobile computing and remote sensing have changed the face of geologic...
Social media is a transformative digital technology, collapsing the "six degrees of separation" whic...
Social media is a transformative digital technology, collapsing the "six degrees of separation" whic...
The Aurorasaurus project harnesses volunteer crowdsourcing to identify sightings of an aurora (the “...
The world of science communication is changing with the increased use of social media and online res...
Social media is increasingly being used to share near-real-time analysis of emergent and sometimes h...
“How far south will the aurora borealis be seen?” is a common question asked when a geomagnetic stor...
Obtaining real-time information about a geohazard event as it unfolds, such as a flood or earthquak...
<p>Presented at the American Geophysical Union Fall 2013 Meeting in San Francisco, California, Dec. ...
The British Geological Survey has a bold new strategy to instrument the earth. What does that mean i...
Problem This dissertation presents a literature-based framework for communication in science (with t...
On March 17, 2015, a geomagnetic storm—the largest of the solar cycle to date— hit Earth and gave ma...
International audienceTwitter is an established social media platform valued by scholars as an open ...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Public Library of Science (PLoS) via the DO...
Applications developed using Web 2.0 technologies, such as social media sites, blogs, wikis etc., h...
Technological advances in GPS, mobile computing and remote sensing have changed the face of geologic...
Social media is a transformative digital technology, collapsing the "six degrees of separation" whic...
Social media is a transformative digital technology, collapsing the "six degrees of separation" whic...
The Aurorasaurus project harnesses volunteer crowdsourcing to identify sightings of an aurora (the “...
The world of science communication is changing with the increased use of social media and online res...