Mastering citizen involvement in international open innovation challenges: Interim lessons learned of the FRANCIS project

  • Liza Wohlfart*
  • , Carmen Antuña Rozado
  • , Rachel O'Boyle
  • , Venkata Gandikota
  • , Tina Klages
  • , Gaye Pocan
  • , Renaud Bissling
  • , Adrian Sins
  • , Reny Kiryakova
  • , Suze Krishnan-Barman
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle in a proceedings journalScientificpeer-review

Abstract

EU-funded project FRANCIS focuses on involving citizens in the development of so-called Frugal Innovations, i.e. simple, affordable and sustainable solutions. It does so by organising open-innovations challenges that are managed through an IT-platform and supported by various recruitment and ideation formats. Usually, Citizen Science only involves citizens for minor tasks such as data collection. FRANCIS jump ahead in science is that the project invites them to propose and work on new solutions that have a real chance to enter the market. Before starting the challenges, the team of FRANCIS already made some assumptions about how to encourage and support participants in the best possible way based on existing publications and first findings from primary research. Now that the first challenge is running, the team had the opportunity to check whether they have proven to be true so far.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)899-912
JournalProcedia Computer Science
Volume237
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024
MoE publication typeA4 Article in a conference publication
EventInternational Conference on Industry Sciences and Computer Science Innovation, iSCSi 2023 - Lisbon, Portugal
Duration: 4 Oct 20236 Oct 2023

Keywords

  • Citizen Science
  • Frugal Innovation
  • marginalised groups
  • Open Innovation

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