Participative Co-Research

In co-research, the research is based on the personal experiences of citizens at risk of exclusion using various services, and the principal guides all stages of research activities.  The idea of such co-operation is to open dialogue between digital service providers, researchers and citizens who use them.

We welcome experts by experience in mental health and substance abuse work as well as peer mentors for immigrants to participate in the DIG1t0 project. Participation in the research group can be done in a variety of ways, such as peer interviews, participatory mind maps and photo diaries, video recordings of usage of digital services, or group discussions and workshops with mental health rehabilitees and immigrants.

We emphasise the significance of co-research to obtain authentic information, especially from the vulnerable users of digital services, so that digital services can be developed better meet their needs. Language problems, such as the ambiguity of the official language and the difficulty of perceiving the architecture of electronic forms, hamper, for example, the ability of immigrants to use digital services.

The role of the language in digitalisation is not evident only in the interaction between a user and a digital system, but also at the different levels of code and algorithms. For example, language plays a key role in structuring and classifying training data for machine learning algorithms using different keywords. In the field of social work, for example, the keywords used by professionals about their clients can be quite varied. The combination of used keywords and statistic-based algorithm models can lead to various degrees of bias and even exclusion of citizens.

Co-research seeks to implement the principles of democracy throughout the research process by involving citizens more actively in research processes.