Saturday, November 12, 2011

#SciFund Puts YOU in Charge of Funding Science!


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Funding science has always relied on public support. Traditionally, scientists at research institutions are awarded money from government agencies and sometimes private foundations. The money from government agencies though, such as NSF and NIH is derived from taxpayer dollars. So, in effect YOU are the one paying out the funds to support a wide array of projects all over the spectrum of research and engineering. But, as Dr. Jai Ranganathan ? one of the cofounders of #SciFund ? wrote here on the Sci-Am Network Central Blog, ?All of the traditional sources of cash for science ? government agencies and private foundations ? are getting harder and harder to access. So what is a scientist to do??

Well, why not let the people themselves decide exactly what scientific research they would like to see done! To accomplish this, #SciFund uses a crowdsourcing approach to funding. Partnering with RocketHub, they launched the #SciFund Challenge. This partnership allows scientists run their own crowdfunding campaigns to fund their research. Scientists put out their proposal and do everything they can to get people as excited about it as they are. This has the unique effect of creating a scientific proposal that appeals to a general audience and not a panel scientific experts. So, successful proposers need to make it and make it relevant, creating a plethora of entertaining proposals using videos, images, colorful text and throwing in research swag and other rewards for different levels of donating. What is great about this system is that scientists can accept micropayments, much as non-profit organizations do, and build up to their research goals.

The #SciFund challenge contains 49 fantastic research projects that span a huge variety of topics. You can scroll them all and see for yourself, but here are the projects with an evolutionary focus:

As you can see there are no shortage of worthy, fascinating research out there that needs YOU to participate in it. Even with $5 or $25 you can make this work a reality.

Kevin ZelnioAbout the Author: Kevin Zelnio is a marine biologist by training and is now a freelance science writer, independent scientist and science communications strategist living in beautiful coastal North Carolina. He has studied the ecology and evolution of animals living around underwater volcanoes and described several new species of deep-sea invertebrates.

Kevin is the assistant editor for Deep Sea News, where he contributes articles on marine science. Outside of science, Kevin is a songwriter and enjoys spending time with family in the long-leaf Carolina pines! To learn more about Kevin view his CV, send him an email and follow him on Google +!

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The views expressed are those of the author and are not necessarily those of Scientific American.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=5757adeaa221d37e1dee9c9ab8e659ed

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