"Human computing power" harnessed from ordinary citizens across the
world has the potential to accelerate the pace of health care research
of all kinds, a team from the Perelman School of Medicine at the
University of Pennsylvania, writes in a new review published online in
the Journal of General Internal Medicine. In fact, they
suggest, crowdsourcing -- a research method that allows investigators to
engage thousands of people to provide either data or data analysis,
usually via online communications -- could even improve the quality of
research while reducing the costs.
But the field is new, and the team's findings suggest that
standardized guidelines for health care crowdsourcing ventures are
needed so that data can be collected, reported, and replicated most
efficiently.
"While the concept of 'citizen science' has been in existence for
more than a century and crowdsourcing has been used in science for at
least a decade, it has been utilized primarily by non-medical fields and
little is known about its potential in health research," said the
study's senior author Raina Merchant, MD, an assistant professor of
Emergency Medicine at Penn.
Merchant and colleagues successfully utilized crowdsourcing in a
recent study to locate and catalog the locations of lifesaving automated
external defibrillators (AEDs) throughout Philadelphia in the
MyHeartMap Challenge. Their study led to the identification of more than
1,400 AEDs in public places, and they hope to replicate the study in
other major cities across the U.S.
For the current review, in addition to a traditional database search,
her team employed crowdsourcing again to perform a literature search
for health and medical research articles using two free websites: Yahoo!
Answers and Quora. Through this approach, they were able to collect and
analyze 21 health-related studies that include crowdsourcing
techniques. The studies collectively engaged a crowd of over 136,000
people, ranging in focus from tracking H1N1 influenza outbreaks in near
real time to classifying different types of polyps in the colon.
"There is understandably some apprehension about letting the lay
public in on medical research or even assisting with making medical
diagnoses because the stakes are so high in medicine. However, studies
we reviewed showed that the crowd can be very successful, such as
solving novel complex protein structure problems or identifying malaria
infected red blood cells with a similar accuracy as a medical
professional," said the study's first author Benjamin Ranard, a third
year medical student in the Perelman School of Medicine.
The research team found that the studies centered around four main
categories of tasks: problem solving, data processing,
surveillance/monitoring and surveying.
However, they found considerable variability in the amount and type
of data reported about the crowd and the experimental set up, which
would make it difficult for other researchers to replicate or model
their work for their own research. For instance, the articles rarely
reported data about the demographics of the crowd participating,
including information standard to most clinical trials such as the size
of the cohort, age, gender, and geographic location. They also noted
that the limited amount of studies they found is surprising given the
potential benefits of this approach.
The authors recommend that other health and medical investigators
should look at their own research projects and consider involving the
public through crowdsourcing. Whenever research requires human
processing that computers alone cannot do, such as visually sorting
pictures or other data, they say there is a potential to involve the
crowd. Crowdsourcing can also be used to take advantage of problem
solving skills members of the public may have (such as solving
three-dimensional puzzles), or to employ the crowd to act as human
sensors reporting data about the environment (for example, reporting
cases of influenza-like symptoms).
"Every health field from studying chronic diseases to global health
has a potential need for human computing power that crowdsourcing could
fill to accelerate research. Prior work has heralded crowdsourcing as a
feasible method for data collection, but a clear roadmap for the types
of questions crowdsourcing could answer and the ways it could be applied
has been lacking," said Merchant. "This review points to the need for
streamlining the process and implementing more rigorous guidelines for
this approach."
They call for continued study of the scope of crowdsourcing to
determine where it might be as useful as traditional data. To further
explore the power of crowdsourcing and other research approaches via
social media, Merchant was recently appointed director of the Social
Media Lab at the Penn Medicine Center for Health Care Innovation. In
this role, she will lead a program exploring ways in which new
communication channels can enhance Penn's ability to understand and
improve the health and health care of patients and other populations.
Other Penn Medicine authors include Yoonhee P. Ha, MSc , Zachary F.
Meisel, MD, MPH, MS, David A. Asch, MD, MBA and, Lance B. Becker, MD.
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