US
Community-engaged Research and Citizen Science | National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
Community-engaged Research and Citizen Science | National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
Skip Navigation
Community-engaged Research and Citizen Science
Close the left navigation
Add
NIEHS has long supported community participation in the research process, and continues to encourage new research approaches that foster collaboration between communities and scientists while building capacity to address environmental health concerns. The institute is also actively involved in recent federal efforts aimed at
encouraging the use of citizen science
Collaborations between citizens and researchers can take many forms along a continuum of public engagement in scientific research. NIEHS program officers Liam O’Fallon and Symma Finn have developed a conceptual framework (see figure) that illustrates the similarities and differences between community-led citizen science efforts and academically-driven research projects. It also shows how these enterprises act to support each other. Collaborative research approaches highlighted within this framework include:
full-sized version of this image
(166KB)
is also available.
Community-engaged research (CEnR). CEnR projects are driven by academic concerns. A scientist or research team engages the community to help develop research questions, design a study, and collect data. The goal is to answer a scientific question or meet a specific research need.
Citizen science. Citizen science efforts are driven by community concerns. These community-led projects may involve a partnership with an academic or research institution, where both parties work together to collect and share data. The goal is to address a community concern through collaborative research, and to translate the research findings into public health action that benefits the community.
How are CEnR and citizen science being used to address environmental health concerns?
Alaska Community Action on Toxics (ACAT)
Environmental Health for Alabama Communities (ENACT)
Gardenroots
: Measuring arsenic in gardens near a hazardous waste site
Grand Lake Watershed Mercury Study
Gulf Coast Health Alliance: health Risks related to the Macondo Spill (GC-HARMS)
HAPI: Putting Community Engaged Research into Action to Address Childhood Asthma
Imperial County Community Air Monitoring Project
Resources
Citizenscience.gov
Citizen Science and Community-Engaged Research in Environmental Public Health
Community Engaged Research Training
Research Triangle Environmental Health Collaborative 2016 Summit Recommendation Document
Publications
Averett N. 2017. New blood: the promise of environmental health citizen science projects. Environ Health Perspect 125(11):112001. [
Full Text
Averett N. 2017. New blood: the promise of environmental health citizen science projects. Environ Health Perspect 125(11):112001.
Back
to Top
Last Reviewed: March 05, 2026