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SCUCA 2013 - International Workshop on Smart City and Ubiquitous Computing Applications

Date2013-06-04

Deadline2013-02-28

VenueMadrid, Spain Spain

Keywords

Websitehttps://www.scuca2013.tuc.gr/

Topics/Call fo Papers

As more and more people leave villages and farms to live in cities, urban growth results. According to the UN State of the World Population 2007 report, sometime in the middle of 2007, the number of people living in cities and towns has overtook the number of people living in the rural areas and this event was recorded in the history as the arrival of the "Urban Millennium" or the 'tipping point'. In regard to future trends, it is estimated 93% of urban growth will occur in developing nations, with 80% of urban growth occurring in Asia and Africa. Urged by these observations, city halls and political decision makers have become very alert, calling for urgent solutions to the growing problems. However, the recent advances in information and communication technologies may stimulate new solutions towards the urbanization problems. This is verified as a target research and innovation area in Horizon 2020 of European Union Policy under the challenge 'Secure Clean and Efficient Energy' with the main goal of jointly Smart Sustainable Cities. The aim is to integrate and validate ICT technologies and services in neighbourhoods to make progress towards intelligent cities by exploiting ubiquitous technologies. In addition to technical developments, attention is given to innovative service business models which include security, safety and privacy issues. Our need to improve our understanding of cities, however, is pressed not only by the social relevance of urban environments, but also by the availability of new strategies for city-scale interventions that are enabled by emerging technologies. Leveraging advances in data analysis, sensor technologies, and urban experiments, City Science will provide new insights into creating a data-driven approach to urban design and planning. To build the cities that the world needs, we need a scientific understanding of cities that considers our built environments and the people who inhabit them.
This call addresses all the aforementioned issues by incorporating new technologies in the area of mobile communications, multimedia services, data storage and handling and ubiquitous computing. The call will cover the area of
Urban Analysis and Modeling:
data-driven analysis of economic activity, human behavior, mobility patterns, resource consumption, etc. in order to inform an evidence-based process of designing new cities
Parametric urban design tools to schematically define mobility nodes, streets, building massing, and location of resources to create nested compact urban cells (walkable neighborhoods)
Urban energy, mobility, water, food, and waste simulator for new, post-oil cities
Typology of streetscapes, pathways, mobility nodes, and responsive technology for cities
Mobility Networks:
Multi-modal mobility recommendation engines
New urban vehicles including electric scooters, automobiles, bike-lane vehicles, etc.
Autonomous vehicle technology and vehicle-pedestrian interfaces
Charging and locking technology for shared-use vehicle systems
Interfaces for shared-use vehicle systems, including proactive, persuasive systems
Electronic parking systems
Multimedia pervasive computing for smart cities
Electronic and Social Networks:
New network-centric methods for managing reactive, data-driven city systems
Social, multimedia and ubiquitous computing for smart cities
Urban-scale serious games to shape use of resources such as shared-used mobility, variable-rate power, and flexible workspaces
Replace one-size-fits-all systems with exchange networks in order to obtain more stable, fair, and socially efficient services
Places of Living and Work
Personalized, transformable urban housing
Time-shifted, shared space-on-demand for collaborative work
Modular, personalized hydroponic and aeroponic urban farming
Sensing and algorithms to understand fine-grained human activity for responsive lighting, HVAC, health, energy conservation, and communication in the home and workplace

Last modified: 2012-12-22 11:30:08