The data quality assessment is a summary of an observation's accuracy. All
observations start as "casual" grade, and achieve
"research" grade when
-
the iNat community agrees with the observer's ID, where an "agreeing"
identification is one that matches exactly or is of a child taxon of the
observer's ID. For example, if Scott says it's a mammal and Ken-ichi
says it's Homo sapiens, then Ken-ichi agrees with Scott.
- the observation has a date
- the observation is georeferenced (i.e. has lat/lon coordinates)
- the observation has a photo
Observations will revert to "casual" grade if the above conditions aren't met or
- the community agrees the location doesn't looks accurate (e.g. monkeys in the middle of the ocean, hippos in office buildings, etc.)
- the community agrees the organism isn't wild/naturalized (e.g. captive or cultivated by humans or intelligent space aliens)
Comments & Identifications
Fantastic contributions - let me know if need any help uploading. iNaturalist only allows you to add one observation at a time so many people first upload photos to Flickr, Facebook or Picasa each of which have really nice bulk-upload features and then bulk import to iNat (here's some videos on how to bulk upload from Flickr https://vimeo.com/33437610 and Facebook https://vimeo.com/33952573). If you want to upload straight to iNat and get tired of adding each one manually, send me an email (loarie at stanford dot edu) and we can come up with another solution. -Scott
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