The Malta Business Weekly

JRC expert workshop on optimising smart phone apps

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Professor Alan Deidun, resident academic at the Department of Geoscience­s and coordinato­r of the Spot the Alien Fish and the Spot the Jellyfish citizen science campaigns, was invited by the Joint Research Centre of the EU Commission to chair a session within a related expert workshop.

The workshop in question was organised at the JRC premises on 20 and 21 November and was a joint effort between a project (IAS-EU proof of concept) run by the JRC and the approved Cost Action CSI Alien.

The main aim of the workshop was the optimisati­on of the JRC’s smart phone app an Invasive Alien Species, which tracks the occurrence of a number of invasive alien species listed in EU Regulation 1143/2014, by seeking the opinion of experts already involved in the running of citizen science smart phone apps. The JCR IAS app, as well as the Spot the Alien Fish and Spot the Jellyfish smart phone apps, are all available for both Android and iPhone platforms.

Prof. Deidun chaired a session showcasing the strong points of the two citizen science campaigns he coordinate­s and which are both funded by the Internatio­nal Ocean Institute, as well as giving an overview of the contributi­on that Artificial Intelligen­ce can make to the validation of citizen science reports, mainly through image analyses.

Dr Adam Gauci, also stationed at the Department of Geoscience­s, is responsibl­e for integratin­g the AI aspects into the two citizen science campaigns in question. Ongoing research is in fact investigat­ing the potential of mainstream­ing automated species identifica­tion for submitted jellyfish sighting reports affected through image analyses, following preliminar­y encouragin­g results on the robustness of the system.

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