Archive for February 2014

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[ecrea] Open Research Workshop: Smart Cities & Big Data

Tue Feb 18 12:55:29 GMT 2014



Open Research Workshop: Smart Cities & Big Data

April 4, 2014 Aarhus University, Denmark

(See Call for Papers below)

Smart Cities and Big Data are relatively new buzzwords, but why? The relationships between urban and technological developments are ancient, and so are humanity’s attempts to store and analyze information to the maximum of its collective capacity. Even one, two three decades ago, if not centuries, such issues were central to national strategies. What else is new?

To a large degree, it’s the ubiquity of both media and messages, the speed— metabolism, as it were—, the commodified access to enormous and complex information manipulation systems: media. Mobile phones and Facebook, to name dominant examples.

But not only do these systems have communicative qualities; they are connected, reciprocally to sensors and actuators, not just as part of their immediate interfaces, but everywhere, forming what appears to be a new situation.

The rapidly increasing complex mediation—and exclusion—potentials are a profound challenge for societies to keep up with, and as with all big societal challenges, one which requires a sensitive and multifaceted apparatus to grasp and influence.

Taking “mobile media and communication” in a broad sense, The Danish Mobile Media and Communication Research Network, together with the Participatory IT Centre, invites interested researchers to take part in a one-day research workshop to share perspectives on the situation.

The aim of this workshop is two-fold:

(1) To encourage researchers from various fields to share their views on what issues are most acutely in need of being better understood, based on ongoing work, methodological critique and/or recent findings.

(2) To encourage disciplines to meet and (net)work together, e.g. in upcoming calls (such as Horizon 2020, INNO+), or in other ways. Disciplines of relevance include, but are not limited to: media & communication, interaction design, urban planning, sociology, computer science, aesthetics, geography, philosphy, engineering, law, architecture and economy.

We have invited two speakers to frame the discussions:

Adam Greenfield, writer and urbanist, based in New York, currently in London, CEO of Urbanscale and Senior Urban Fellow at LSE Cities, London School of Economics. Adam recently published Against the Smart City, the first part in a pamhlet series entitled The City Is Here For You To Use, and he is the author of the seminal book Everyware (2006) as well as Urban Computing and Its Discontents (2007), a conversation with Mark Shepard.

Kaj Grønbæk, PhD, professor in computer science at Aarhus University and Head of Research and Innovation at the Alexandra Institute’s Interactive Spaces Lab. Kaj has worked with everyday systems, blending physical and digital qualities, for more than a decade.

Projects include the ongoing EcoSense, and iFloor, which has later been commercialized as WizeFloor. Recently named top research innovator by Danish think tank Monday Morning.

CALL FOR PARTICIPATION

The format is short position paper presentations in themed panels of three presentations + discussion based on a submitted abstract of max. 400 words.

Abstracts should be submitted no later than February 20 to (anjabechmann /at/ gmail.com) or (brynskov /at/ cavi.au.dk). Notifications of acceptance will be sent out by March 1.

Please note that we plan to group presentations into the four following categories:

*

Smart Cities
*

Big Data
• Governance

• Privacy/surveillance

Please indicate which category you find most fitting for your presentation.

The workshop will take place in Aarhus, Denmark, April 4, from 9 am to 17 pm.

Cost/participation fee policy: No cost for attending, including food. Travel/accomodation is paid by participants themselves.

After the workshop there will be a joint dinner for those interested (self-paid).

If you have questions, please contact the workshop chairs:

Anja Bechmann <(anjabechmann /at/ gmail.com)> (Digital Footprints Research Group) & Martin Brynskov <(brynskov /at/ cavi.au.dk)> (Participatory IT Centre),

Aarhus University.









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