Today 3 p.m. ET! Join the Fight Against COVID-19. Help Scientists With Their Coronavirus Research From Your Home

Discover and SciStarter are hosting a live, online Citizen Science Month event looking at three COVID-19 research projects that need your help.

On Wednesday, April 15, at 3 p.m. EDT, Discover and SciStarter will host a livestreamed event on Zoom and Facebook to introduce you to three scientists leading COVID-19 citizen science projects that need your help. The event is part of Citizen Science Month.

(Credit: FoldIt & Citizen Science Salon)

In the discussion, you’ll learn how to identify behaviors that influence risk; crowdsource the COVID-19 pandemic in real time; and play an online game to fold and design proteins for scientific research.

Anna Funk, associate editor of Discover magazine, will moderate the discussion. We’ll provide step-by-step guides so we can get involved in real time, online, together. You can create your SciStarter account (free) and get familiar with the three COVID-19 projects before the event by visiting SciStarter.org/COVID-19.

You’ll also find the event live at Discover’s Facebook page, facebook.com/DiscoverMag.

Here are the projects that scientists will discuss:

COVID-19 Citizen Science

Scientists at the University of California, San Francisco, hope to enroll 1 million people in “real-time epidemiology” research. This program, called COVID-19 Citizen Science (CCS), starts with an initial 15-minute survey about a volunteer’s health and daily habits. The program will follow up with subsequent questions throughout the study, which will be sent via an app or text message.

(Credit: COVID-19 Citizen Science)

Volunteers can even offer up their GPS location and, eventually, highly detailed information like blood pressure, weight, blood oxygen levels, body temperature, exercise and sleep. That information would come through wearable devices like Fitbits.

By tracking a huge number of people over time, the researchers hope to identify factors that change the risk of infection and what happens afterward. The more people get involved, the more statistically significant the results will be.


Take Part: Join COVID-19 Citizen Science at SciStarter.org.


COVID Near You

Health officials can’t fight the coronavirus pandemic without knowing where infections are.

In just the first week, thousands of people reported their symptoms and coronavirus test results to COVID Near You. The researchers behind the effort work with national, regional and local health officials to help guide response plans. (Credit: COVID Near You)

Now, researchers have created a way to track people with COVID-19 symptoms, even if they still can’t easily test and diagnose who actually has the disease.

The effort is called COVID Near You. Anyone in the U.S. can use the initiative’s website to self-report their location and how they’re feeling. The researchers work with national and local officials to monitor potential hot spots.

In just the first week, thousands of people reported their symptoms and coronavirus test results to COVID Near You. The researchers behind the effort work with national, regional and local health officials to help guide response plans. (Credit: COVID Near You)

Take Part: Join the COVID Near You Project at SciStarter.org.


Fight COVID-19 with Foldit

You wash your hands thoroughly and stifle your natural hugging urge, but what else can you do to battle COVID-19? Join the Foldit project!

(Credit: Foldit)

There, you will play a free online game in which the goal is to design an antiviral protein that targets the dangerous virus.


Take Part: Join the Foldit Project at SciStarter.org.

Categories: Citizen Science Month

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About the Author

Caroline Nickerson

Caroline Nickerson

Caroline Nickerson is an advisor at SciStarter, where she assists with the Citizen Science Month Program, SciStarter’s Corporate Volunteer Programs and other programmatic and outreach efforts. Caroline is a Master of Public Policy graduate from American University, where she was a Reilly Environmental Policy Scholar, and is a current PhD student at the University of Florida. She also works with the UF-VA Bioethics Unit, the Christensen Project, Florida Community Innovation and other organizations. She was the 2019 Cherry Blossom Princess representing the state of Florida and the grand prize scholarship winner at Miss Earth USA 2021 as Miss Louisiana Earth.