A Review of Citizen Science and Crowdsourcing in Applications of Pluvial Flooding

Pluvial flooding can have devastating effects, both in terms of loss of life and damage. Predicting pluvial floods is difficult and many cities do not have a hydrodynamic model or an early warning system in place. Citizen science and crowdsourcing have the potential for contributing to early warning...

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Main Author: Linda See
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Earth Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/feart.2019.00044/full
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spelling doaj-2fb39c68c3a243eea04225b877150bdb2020-11-25T02:17:13ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Earth Science2296-64632019-03-01710.3389/feart.2019.00044434426A Review of Citizen Science and Crowdsourcing in Applications of Pluvial FloodingLinda SeePluvial flooding can have devastating effects, both in terms of loss of life and damage. Predicting pluvial floods is difficult and many cities do not have a hydrodynamic model or an early warning system in place. Citizen science and crowdsourcing have the potential for contributing to early warning systems (EWS) and can also provide data for validating flood forecasting models. Although there are increasing applications of citizen science and crowdsourcing in fluvial hydrology, less is known about activities related to pluvial flooding. Hence the aim of this paper is to review current activities in citizen science and crowdsourcing with respect to applications of pluvial flooding. Based on a search in Scopus, the papers were first filtered for relevant content and then classified into four main themes. The first two themes were divided into (i) applications relevant during a flood event, which includes automated street flooding detection using crowdsourced photographs and sensors, analysis of social media, and online and mobile applications for flood reporting; and (ii) applications related to post-flood events. The use of citizen science and crowdsourcing for model development and validation is the third theme while the development of integrated systems is theme four. All four main areas of research have the potential to contribute to EWS and build community resilience. Moreover, developments in one will benefit others, e.g., further developments in flood reporting applications and automated flood detection systems will yield data useful for model validation.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/feart.2019.00044/fullpluvial floodingurban floodingcitizen sciencecrowdsourcingmobile appssensors
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Linda See
spellingShingle Linda See
A Review of Citizen Science and Crowdsourcing in Applications of Pluvial Flooding
Frontiers in Earth Science
pluvial flooding
urban flooding
citizen science
crowdsourcing
mobile apps
sensors
author_facet Linda See
author_sort Linda See
title A Review of Citizen Science and Crowdsourcing in Applications of Pluvial Flooding
title_short A Review of Citizen Science and Crowdsourcing in Applications of Pluvial Flooding
title_full A Review of Citizen Science and Crowdsourcing in Applications of Pluvial Flooding
title_fullStr A Review of Citizen Science and Crowdsourcing in Applications of Pluvial Flooding
title_full_unstemmed A Review of Citizen Science and Crowdsourcing in Applications of Pluvial Flooding
title_sort review of citizen science and crowdsourcing in applications of pluvial flooding
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Earth Science
issn 2296-6463
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Pluvial flooding can have devastating effects, both in terms of loss of life and damage. Predicting pluvial floods is difficult and many cities do not have a hydrodynamic model or an early warning system in place. Citizen science and crowdsourcing have the potential for contributing to early warning systems (EWS) and can also provide data for validating flood forecasting models. Although there are increasing applications of citizen science and crowdsourcing in fluvial hydrology, less is known about activities related to pluvial flooding. Hence the aim of this paper is to review current activities in citizen science and crowdsourcing with respect to applications of pluvial flooding. Based on a search in Scopus, the papers were first filtered for relevant content and then classified into four main themes. The first two themes were divided into (i) applications relevant during a flood event, which includes automated street flooding detection using crowdsourced photographs and sensors, analysis of social media, and online and mobile applications for flood reporting; and (ii) applications related to post-flood events. The use of citizen science and crowdsourcing for model development and validation is the third theme while the development of integrated systems is theme four. All four main areas of research have the potential to contribute to EWS and build community resilience. Moreover, developments in one will benefit others, e.g., further developments in flood reporting applications and automated flood detection systems will yield data useful for model validation.
topic pluvial flooding
urban flooding
citizen science
crowdsourcing
mobile apps
sensors
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/feart.2019.00044/full
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