-
- 29 JanDr. Nimish Biloria appointed as board member OCEAN Design Research Association
- 29 JanNext Generation Building special issue: info-matter, edited by Dr. Nimish Biloria and Matias Del Campo is out now.
- 27 JanFinal Review MSc1 Design Studio: EXPO 2025 (World Expo Rotterdam 2025)
- 26 JanHenriette Bier and Sina Mostafavi publish paper on Structural Optimization for Materially Informed D2RP
- 15 JanJoint PhD student Tiantian Du joins Hyperbody
- 12 Jan Henriette Bier and Sina Mostafavi discuss how robotic processes improve the built environment in Delta interview
- 04 JanFibrous Smart Material Topologies initiated by Dr. Nimish Biloria has received funding from 3TU.Bouw and will be implemented in collaboration with TU Eindhoven, U Twente and EURECAT
- 26 NovHyperbody MSc2 studios "Design To Robotic Production" and "Inter-Activating Environments" prototypes at exhibition "Synthetic 2015"
- 24 NovProf. Kas Oosterhuis will lecture at Dubai Chamber of Commerce on 24th of November at 13:30. The lecture is entitled: "Unchaining The Building Industry"
- 12 NovSocialGlass is among the selected projects to be presented at 'De Veranderende Stad' Exhibition in Amsterdam
-
-
Place: Godsbanen (Skovgaardsgade 3H, 8000 Aarhus C), Aarhus, Denmark
Time: April 4, 9-17 CET
From Big Data to Linked Data:
Extracting and Interlinking Knowledge Patterns about the City via Semantic Participatory Platforms
The proliferation of sensor and actuator networks in the urban environment is directly associated with an increasing volume of data, with regard to to various aspects of the city. Synchronously, the heterogeneity of data formats, sensory observations, measuring capabilities and accompanying contextual information is substantially growing. Yet, besides this increasing diversification, the present-day sensing and actuation mechanisms become to a great extent web-enabled, departing from small-scale local networks. In other words, the devices collaborate not only by exchanging data among themselves, but also by communicating their observations over the Internet. Aggregating immense amounts of data feeds from different networks is not necessarily sufficient for providing a better understanding about the processes taking place in the city. Instead, it is essential to extract knowledge patterns, correlated and integrated in meaningful stories about the urban environment.
In light of this new dimension of reality, this paper investigates mechanisms to mitigate the abundance of information and derive essential knowledge about the city, stemming from heterogeneous sensor networks. It specifically exemplifies various urban sensing methodologies that employ not only technical devices, but also human agents. By weaving together the diverse source measurements and observations, while tackling the syntactic and semantic discrepancies, we aim to depart from the mere notion of Big Data to that of Linked Data. The goal subsequently is to facilitate the creation of applications that address multiple aspects of the city and allow for collective decision-making, even in real-time. In this regard, Semantic Web technologies in association with sensor networks can play a key role, pertaining to the interoperability between diverse data models and the acquisition of knowledge patterns about urban dynamics.
http://pit.au.dk/news-events/events/upcoming-events/research-workshop-smart-cities-and-big-data/