Smoke Sense Study: A Citizen Science Project Using a Mobile App
Smoke Sense is a crowdsourcing, citizen science research project developed by EPA researchers focused on increasing public awareness and engagement related to wildfire smoke health risks. Specifically, EPA wants to understand the extent that exposure to wildland fire smoke affects health and productivity, discover what steps people are willing to take to reduce their exposure, and develop health risk communication strategies that improve public health when there is wildfire smoke.
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Publications
Journal Articles
- Peer-reviewed article published by Frontiers, 05 May 2020
Scaling Up: Citizen Science Engagement and Impacts Beyond the Individual
- Peer-reviewed article published by Citizen Science: Theory and Practice, 07 Jan 2020
- Peer-reviewed article published by GeoHealth, 20 Nov 2019
Presentations
EPA’s Smoke Sense: A Citizen Science Project Using a Mobile App, Webinar hosted by the National Environmental Health Association (Sept 2021)
Newsletter Stories
Smoke Sense Adds Spanish-Speaking Version to Reach Those Impacted by Wildfire Smoke - Science Matters Story
A Conversation with the Lead Investigator
Blogs
Blog: Wildfire Smoke Resilience Resources from the EPA