2022
DOI: 10.1177/20539517221110218
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The role of sensors in the production of smart city spaces

Abstract: Smart cities build on the idea of collecting data about the city in order for city administration to be operated more efficiently. Within a research project gathering an interdisciplinary team of researchers – engineers, designers, gender scholars and human geographers – we have been working together using participatory design approaches to explore how paying attention to the diversity of human needs may contribute to making urban spaces comfortable and safe for more people. The project team has deployed senso… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…This implies that the monitoring locations need to be carefully designed if only a limited number of sensors are available. In recent years, these hyper-local, dense, and real-time sensors have become the most common method to collect data in cities (Alvarez et al, 2019;Enlund et al, 2022;Ma et al, 2019). Many cities around the world have urban observation networks that are used to study urban climate, such as Baltimore (Shi et al, 2021), Twin Cities (Smoliak et al, 2015), Shanghai (Tan et al, 2015), Tainan (Y.-C. Chen et al, 2019), to name a few.…”
Section: Journal Of Advances In Modeling Earth Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This implies that the monitoring locations need to be carefully designed if only a limited number of sensors are available. In recent years, these hyper-local, dense, and real-time sensors have become the most common method to collect data in cities (Alvarez et al, 2019;Enlund et al, 2022;Ma et al, 2019). Many cities around the world have urban observation networks that are used to study urban climate, such as Baltimore (Shi et al, 2021), Twin Cities (Smoliak et al, 2015), Shanghai (Tan et al, 2015), Tainan (Y.-C. Chen et al, 2019), to name a few.…”
Section: Journal Of Advances In Modeling Earth Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this way, by intelligently integrating devices, in construction, industrial, or residential environments, it is possible to approach the concept of a smart grid. This concept, associated with the use of smart sensors, is discussed in [9,40,[71][72][73][74][75]. The works present methods and examples that relate the use of smart sensors to the concept of and application in smart grids and smart cities.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Consequently, a large body of work sees smart cities as an inherently technological approach based on effective data collection, analysis and communication to solve urban problems that address economic, social, environmental and governance issues. However problematic (see eg [80] and the references therein), this view is, without doubt, a dominating legacy. A DT can provide the necessary processing of data collection systems to formalise the physical twin (here the city) and provide analytics for governance, management and maintenance [81].…”
Section: A the Smart City Digital Twinmentioning
confidence: 99%