Abstract

Crowdfunding has gained traction as a mechanism to raise resources for entrepreneurial and artistic projects, yet there is little systematic evidence on the potential of crowdfunding for scientific research. We first briefly review prior research on crowdfunding and give an overview of dedicated platforms for crowdfunding research. We then analyze data from over 700 campaigns on the largest dedicated platform, Experiment.com. Our descriptive analysis provides insights regarding the creators seeking funding, the projects they are seeking funding for, and the campaigns themselves. We then examine how these characteristics relate to fundraising success. The findings highlight important differences between crowdfunding and traditional funding mechanisms for research, including high use by students and other junior investigators but also relatively small project size. Students and junior investigators are more likely to succeed than senior scientists, and women have higher success rates than men. Conventional signals of quality–including scientists’ prior publications–have little relationship with funding success, suggesting that the crowd may apply different decision criteria than traditional funding agencies. Our results highlight significant opportunities for crowdfunding in the context of science while also pointing towards unique challenges. We relate our findings to research on the economics of science and on crowdfunding, and we discuss connections with other emerging mechanisms to involve the public in scientific research.

Highlights

  • Crowdfunding–an open call for money from the general public–has become an important source of funding for entrepreneurial, artistic, and social projects [1,2,3,4]

  • To assess the potential of crowdfunding for scientific research, we report initial evidence from Experiment.com, the currently largest dedicated platform for crowdfunding research

  • We find no systematic differences in funding success between creators affiliated with educational institutions versus any other type of organizations

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Summary

Introduction

Crowdfunding–an open call for money from the general public–has become an important source of funding for entrepreneurial, artistic, and social projects [1,2,3,4]. There are charity fundraising platforms such as Benefunder and Thecommongood Such platforms differ from Experiment.com in that funds are typically raised for an organization or general cause rather than specific research projects, fundraising is open ended with no time limit, and there is no explicit fundraising target and no “all-or-nothing” mechanism. These platforms are similar to traditional charity institutions, except that they use the online channel for fundraising. We scraped the webpage content of these campaigns to obtain

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