 So, my name is Erika Shwaimushi. I am a lecturer at the University of Manchester. So, I started looking into fix my street data during my PhD. The area that I work in, we're often interested in where people perceive signs of disorder to signal something about the environment that maybe something's not quite right in the neighborhood. And if we go around just measuring where there's graffiti or where there's litter, as a sort of objective researcher, we just pick up everything. Whereas there might be a bit of graffiti that people consider normal. And so, fix my street, I thought was a really good opportunity to look at what people themselves who are doing the reporting are defining as a problem worthy of reporting. So, it's very interesting to look at where people are participating in this, also who is participating in this, and what kind of motivations people might have. So, one of the things I found with fix my street was there were some people that contributed a huge number of reports. I think one person at the time had over 800 reports. Whereas the majority of people just go the one time. And so, it's very interesting to look at how people use this to, I guess, better their communities to be able to report something in their environment that they want fixed.