76 research outputs found
Introduction to IoT
The Internet of Things has rapidly transformed the 21st century, enhancing
decision-making processes and introducing innovative consumer services such as
pay-as-you-use models. The integration of smart devices and automation
technologies has revolutionized every aspect of our lives, from health services
to the manufacturing industry, and from the agriculture sector to mining.
Alongside the positive aspects, it is also essential to recognize the
significant safety, security, and trust concerns in this technological
landscape. This chapter serves as a comprehensive guide for newcomers
interested in the IoT domain, providing a foundation for making future
contributions. Specifically, it discusses the overview, historical evolution,
key characteristics, advantages, architectures, taxonomy of technologies, and
existing applications in major IoT domains. In addressing prevalent issues and
challenges in designing and deploying IoT applications, the chapter examines
security threats across architectural layers, ethical considerations, user
privacy concerns, and trust-related issues. This discussion equips researchers
with a solid understanding of diverse IoT aspects, providing a comprehensive
understanding of IoT technology along with insights into the extensive
potential and impact of this transformative field.Comment: 48 pages, 7 figures, 8 tables, chapter 1 revised version of "IoT and
ML for Information Management: A Smart Healthcare Perspective" under the
Springer Studies in Computational Intelligence serie
KEER2022
AvanttĂtol: KEER2022. DiversitiesDescripciĂł del recurs: 25 juliol 202
Digital Transformation
The amount of literature on Digital Transformation is staggering—and it keeps growing. Why, then,
come out with yet another such document? Moreover, any text aiming at explaining the Digital
Transformation by presenting a snapshot is going to become obsolete in a blink of an eye, most likely to
be already obsolete at the time it is first published.
The FDC Initiative on Digital Reality felt there is a need to look at the Digital Transformation from the
point of view of a profound change that is pervading the entire society—a change made possible by
technology and that keeps changing due to technology evolution opening new possibilities but is also a
change happening because it has strong economic reasons. The direction of this change is not easy to
predict because it is steered by a cultural evolution of society, an evolution that is happening in niches
and that may expand rapidly to larger constituencies and as rapidly may fade away. This creation,
selection by experimentation, adoption, and sudden disappearance, is what makes the whole scenario
so unpredictable and continuously changing.The amount of literature on Digital Transformation is staggering—and it keeps growing. Why, then,
come out with yet another such document? Moreover, any text aiming at explaining the Digital
Transformation by presenting a snapshot is going to become obsolete in a blink of an eye, most likely to
be already obsolete at the time it is first published.
The FDC Initiative on Digital Reality felt there is a need to look at the Digital Transformation from the
point of view of a profound change that is pervading the entire society—a change made possible by
technology and that keeps changing due to technology evolution opening new possibilities but is also a
change happening because it has strong economic reasons. The direction of this change is not easy to
predict because it is steered by a cultural evolution of society, an evolution that is happening in niches
and that may expand rapidly to larger constituencies and as rapidly may fade away. This creation,
selection by experimentation, adoption, and sudden disappearance, is what makes the whole scenario
so unpredictable and continuously changing
A Seamless Virtual Emotion System with Replaceable Detection toward Proper Emotion-based IoT Services
International audienc
Challenges and Opportunities in Applied System Innovation
This book introduces and provides solutions to a variety of problems faced by society, companies and individuals in a quickly changing and technology-dependent world. The wide acceptance of artificial intelligence, the upcoming fourth industrial revolution and newly designed 6G technologies are seen as the main enablers and game changers in this environment. The book considers these issues not only from a technological viewpoint but also on how society, labor and the economy are affected, leading to a circular economy that affects the way people design, function and deploy complex systems
In Search of the DomoNovus: Speculative Designs for the Computationally-Enhanced Domestic Environment
Edited version embargoed until 01.02.2018
Full version: Access restricted permanently due to 3rd party copyright restrictions. Restriction set on 01.02.2017 by SC, Graduate schoolThe home is a physical place that provides isolation, comfort, access to essential needs on a daily basis, and it has a strong impact on a person’s life. Computational and media technologies (digital and electronic objects, devices, protocols, virtual spaces, telematics, interaction, social media, and cyberspace) become an important and vital part of the home ecology, although they have the ability to transform the domestic experience and the understanding of what a personal space is.
For this reason, this work investigates the domestication of computational media technology; how objects, systems, and devices become part of the personal and intimate space of the inhabitants. To better understand the taming process, the home is studied and analysed from a range of perspectives (philosophy, sociology, architecture, art, and technology), and a methodological process is proposed for critically exploring the topic with the development of artworks, designs, and computational systems.
The methodology of this research, which consists of five points (Context, Media Layers, Invisible Matter, Diffusion, and Symbiosis), suggests a procedure that is fundamental to the development and critical integration of the computationally enhanced home. Accordingly, the home is observed as an ecological system that contains numerous properties (organic, inorganic, hybrid, virtual, augmented), and is viewed on a range of scales (micro, meso and macro). To identify the “choreographies” that are formed between these properties and scales, case studies have been developed to suggest, provoke, and speculate concepts, ideas, and alternative realities of the home. Part of the speculation proposes the concept of DomoNovus (the “New Home”), where technological ubiquity supports the inhabitants’ awareness, perception, and imagination. DomoNovus intends to challenge our understanding of the domestic environment, and demonstrates a range of possibilities, threats, and limitations in relation to the future of home.
This thesis, thus, presents methods, experiments, and speculations that intend to inform and inspire, as well as define creative and imaginative dimensions of the computationally-enhanced home, suggesting directions for the further understanding of the domestic life.Alexander S. Onassis Public Benefit Foundatio
Design revolutions: IASDR 2019 Conference Proceedings. Volume 4: Learning, Technology, Thinking
In September 2019 Manchester School of Art at Manchester Metropolitan University was honoured to host the bi-annual conference of the International Association of Societies of Design Research (IASDR) under the unifying theme of DESIGN REVOLUTIONS. This was the first time the conference had been held in the UK. Through key research themes across nine conference tracks – Change, Learning, Living, Making, People, Technology, Thinking, Value and Voices – the conference opened up compelling, meaningful and radical dialogue of the role of design in addressing societal and organisational challenges. This Volume 4 includes papers from Learning, Technology and Thinking tracks of the conference
From empowering to motivating:Enhancing policy enforcement through process design and incentive implementation
Policy enforcement is crucial in our daily life, from protecting rights to promoting collaborations. In practice, designed processes and institutional incentives are two powerful tools in enforcing policies. Processes empower compliance and prevent non-compliance by technology, while incentives motivate adherence through rewards and punishments.Given the distinct mechanisms of these two methods, this dissertation addresses policy enforcement from the perspectives of empowerment and motivation in Part I and Part II, respectively.Part I focuses on designing appropriate processes, including pre-audit, operational execution, and post-audit, to empower and terminate compliant and non-compliant behaviors. It further realizes these processes by blockchain and smart contract technologies.Part II discusses comprehensive criteria for institutional incentive design and potential corruption in incentive implementation. It predicts incentive effectiveness through mathematical modeling and simulation experiments.It is worth mentioning that, although the enforced policies in this dissertation are primarily for data governance, the obtained results can be applied to various scenarios
Recommended from our members
Sensored: The Quantified Self, Self-Tracking, and the Limits of Digital Transparency
The idea that daily life overflows with data has entered our common sense. Digital sensors placed in phones, clothing, or household appliances to track how we walk, how much we sleep, or where we travel have heightened the sense that everything about our lives is rapidly being translated into data. Theorists writing about data overload have largely converged around questions of privacy and agency, focusing on the feelings of impotence produced by large quantities of data that now let corporations effortlessly monitor and regulate people’s lives.
By contrast, I am interested in moments of friction. Scholars point to real issues, but they overstate the efficacy of data gathering and discount the professional dynamics that motivate the proliferation of data. As I evaluate how data discourse operates and builds, I concentrate on the experiences of those involved in the business of self-tracking, and mainly on the work of U.S.-based developers of wearable computing and the technology professionals who participate in the international forum for data enthusiasts called the Quantified Self. As I analyze how digital entrepreneurialism configures notions of data and transforms digital self-monitoring into meaningful work, I examine how the relationship of technology professionals to data opens onto wider debates about the politics of digital representation. Ultimately, by applying an anthropological lens to explore how the practices, beliefs, and views of marketers, engineers, and developers of self-tracking tools shape digital knowledge, this research challenges accounts of data based purely on transparency, anxiety, and fear and reveals just how precarious the control exerted by digital companies and self-monitoring tools really is
- …