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Public spaces perception in smart cities
Nowadays the possibility of being ubiquitous connected generates new patterns in the relation between people and the built environment. This research seeks to investigate how the widespread use of smartphones frames people’s perception, behaviour and interaction with public spaces and create new forms of urban dynamics in the Smart Cities era. In this context, we compared the different social groups (tourists, temporary and permanent residents) that inhabit the city. Adopting traditional methods of field observation and combining them with surveys and interviews we have extended and improved existing methodologies, generating a singular comprehensive dataset, consisting of more than 5000 observations. The analysis of all collected data provided insightful outcomes both at street level and from the users’ point of view. The results evince that behavioural patterns on the use of technology in public spaces are tightly linked to the social group each person belongs to and to the relation each one has to a place. Despite the infinite possibilities of being online, mediated perception do not replace the intangible value of face-to-face relations.
Public spaces perception in smart cities
Nowadays the possibility of being ubiquitous connected generates new patterns in the relation between people and the built environment. This research seeks to investigate how the widespread use of smartphones frames people’s perception, behaviour and interaction with public spaces and create new forms of urban dynamics in the Smart Cities era. In this context, we compared the different social groups (tourists, temporary and permanent residents) that inhabit the city. Adopting traditional methods of field observation and combining them with surveys and interviews we have extended and improved existing methodologies, generating a singular comprehensive dataset, consisting of more than 5000 observations. The analysis of all collected data provided insightful outcomes both at street level and from the users’ point of view. The results evince that behavioural patterns on the use of technology in public spaces are tightly linked to the social group each person belongs to and to the relation each one has to a place. Despite the infinite possibilities of being online, mediated perception do not replace the intangible value of face-to-face relations.
Public spaces perception in smart cities
2015-07-01
Theses
Electronic Resource
English
Electronic villages (Computer networks) , Urban environment , Ciutats digitals (Xarxes d'ordinadors) , Collaborative , Perception , Technology , Public spaces -- Spain -- Barcelona , Data visualization , Sociology , Smart cities , Tourism , Ubiquitous computing , Sociologia urbana -- Catalunya -- Barcelona , Àrees temàtiques de la UPC::Urbanisme , Urban -- Spain -- Barcelona , Urban dynamics , Urban space , Geo-localization , Public space , Espais públics -- Catalunya -- Barcelona , Spatial analysis
DDC:
720
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