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  ## Dataset Description
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  ### Dataset Summary
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  ARTigo (https://www.artigo.org/) is a Citizen Science project that has been jointly developed at the Institute for Art History and the Institute for Informatics at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich since 2010. It enables participants to engage in the tagging of artworks, thus fostering knowledge accumulation and democratizing access to a traditionally elitist field. ARTigo is built as an interactive web application that offers Games With a Purpose: in them, players are presented with an image – and then challenged to communicate with one another using visual or textual annotations, *tags*, within a given time. Through this playful approach, the project aims to inspire greater appreciation for art and draw new audiences to museums and archives. It streamlines the discoverability of art-historical images, while promoting inclusivity, effective communication, and collaborative research practices. The project’s data are freely available to the wider research community for novel scientific investigations.
 
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  ## Dataset Description
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+ - **Homepage:** https://www.artigo.org
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+ - **Repository:** https://github.com/arthist-lmu/artigo
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+ - **Data:** https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8202331
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  ### Dataset Summary
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  ARTigo (https://www.artigo.org/) is a Citizen Science project that has been jointly developed at the Institute for Art History and the Institute for Informatics at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich since 2010. It enables participants to engage in the tagging of artworks, thus fostering knowledge accumulation and democratizing access to a traditionally elitist field. ARTigo is built as an interactive web application that offers Games With a Purpose: in them, players are presented with an image – and then challenged to communicate with one another using visual or textual annotations, *tags*, within a given time. Through this playful approach, the project aims to inspire greater appreciation for art and draw new audiences to museums and archives. It streamlines the discoverability of art-historical images, while promoting inclusivity, effective communication, and collaborative research practices. The project’s data are freely available to the wider research community for novel scientific investigations.