Mapping the Crowdsourcing Workforce in Latin America and the Caribbean

Authors

  • Gianna Williams Northeastern University
  • Maya De Los Santos Northeastern University
  • Alexandra To Northeastern University
  • Saiph Savage Northeastern University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47756/aihc.y9i1.160

Keywords:

Human-centered computing, Human computer interaction (HCI), User studies

Abstract

Research has primarily focused on understanding the perspectives and experiences of US based crowdworkers, leaving a notable gap to those within the Global South. To bridge this, we conducted a survey with 100 crowdworkers across 16 Latin American and Caribbean countries. To understand the tensions between the crowdworking economy abroad. In our study we found crowd work being the stepping stone to financial and professional independence among those we surveyed along with the tensions within data extraction among crowdworkers.

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Published

2024-11-30

How to Cite

[1]
Williams, G. et al. 2024. Mapping the Crowdsourcing Workforce in Latin America and the Caribbean. Avances en Interacción Humano-Computadora. 9, 1 (Nov. 2024), 146–153. DOI:https://doi.org/10.47756/aihc.y9i1.160.

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Research Papers

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