English

Experiments on Crowdsourcing Policy Assessment

Computers and Society 2017-02-15 v1 Human-Computer Interaction

Abstract

Can Crowds serve as useful allies in policy design? How do non-expert Crowds perform relative to experts in the assessment of policy measures? Does the geographic location of non-expert Crowds, with relevance to the policy context, alter the performance of non-experts Crowds in the assessment of policy measures? In this work, we investigate these questions by undertaking experiments designed to replicate expert policy assessments with non-expert Crowds recruited from Virtual Labor Markets. We use a set of ninety-six climate change adaptation policy measures previously evaluated by experts in the Netherlands as our control condition to conduct experiments using two discrete sets of non-expert Crowds recruited from Virtual Labor Markets. We vary the composition of our non-expert Crowds along two conditions: participants recruited from a geographical location directly relevant to the policy context and participants recruited at-large. We discuss our research methods in detail and provide the findings of our experiments.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1702.04219,
  title  = {Experiments on Crowdsourcing Policy Assessment},
  author = {J. Prpic and A. Taeihagh and J. Melton},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1702.04219},
  year   = {2017}
}

Comments

Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford - IPP 2014 - Crowdsourcing for Politics and Policy

R2 v1 2026-06-22T18:18:03.428Z