Handbook of Research on Urban Informatics: The Practice and Promise of the Real-Time City: The Practice and Promise of the Real-Time City

Front Cover
Foth, Marcus
IGI Global, Dec 31, 2008 - Architecture - 506 pages

Alive with movement and excitement, cities transmit a rapid flow of exchange facilitated by a meshwork of infrastructure connections. In this environment, the Internet has advanced to become the prime communication medium, creating a vibrant and increasingly researched field of study in urban informatics.

The Handbook of Research on Urban Informatics: The Practice and Promise of the Real-Time City brings together an international selection of 66 esteemed scholars presenting their research and development on urban technology, digital cities, locative media, and mobile and wireless applications. A truly global resource, this one-of-a-kind reference collection contains significant and timely research covering a diverse range of current issues in the urban informatics field, making it an essential addition to technology and social science collections in academic libraries that will benefit scholars and practitioners in an array of fields ranging from computer science to urban studies.

 

Contents

Examining and Refining the Assumptions Behind Urban Informatics
1
Ubiquitous Technologies Urban Infrastructure and Everyday Life in the Contemporary Korean City
21
Creating an Analytical Lens for Understanding Digital Networks in Urban South Africa
37
Place Making Through Participatory Planning
55
Creating Interactive Forums with Urban Publics
68
Forces That Influence Participation
87
Moments and Modes for Triggering Civic Participation at the Urban Level
97
Some Methodological Reflections
115
Virtual Cities for Simulating Smart Urban Public Spaces
257
Digital Mirrors into a Resursive World
270
Community Wireless Networks and the Reconfiguration of Cities
292
Home is Where the Hub Is? Wireless Infrastructures and the Nature of Domestic Culture in Australia
310
Mapping the MIT Campus in Real Time Using WiFi
326
Supporting Community with LocationSensitive Mobile Applications
339
The Evolution of Mobile Phone Practice
353
The Next Paradigm of Urban Development
367

On the Practical Applications of Urban Neighbourhood Video Cameras
131
Appropriating Information and Communication Technologies to Animate Our Urban Fabric
144
Ephemeral Histories Locative Media and the Volatile Interface
158
Embedding an Ecology Notion in the Social Production of Urban Space
179
Urban Computing to Bridge Online and RealWorld Social Networks
196
Navigating Interfaces between Physical and Digital Space
206
A Visual Approach to Locative Urban Information
219
The Augmented Spaces of Car Navigation Systems
230
Creating a LargeScale Street View as UserGenerated Content
244
Exploring the Emergence of the Chinese City 20
379
RealTime LocationSensitive Tools for the City
390
Enabling Participatory Urbanism
414
Toward the DeSaturated City
437
Urban Informatics and Social Ontology
450
About the Contributors
455
Index
467
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About the author (2008)

Marcus Foth is a Senior Research Fellow at the Institute for Creative Industries and Innovation, Queensland University of Technology (QUT), Brisbane, Australia. He received a BCompSc(Hon) from Furtwangen University, Germany, a BMultimedia from Griffith University, Australia and an MA and PhD in digital media and urban sociology from QUT. Marcus is the recipient of an Australian Postdoctoral Fellowship supported under the Australian Research Council?s Discovery funding scheme and a 2007 Visiting Fellowship from the Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford, UK. Marcus? work is positioned at the intersection of people, place and technology with a focus on urban informatics, locative media and mobile applications. His research has significantly shaped the social strategies of the Kelvin Grove Urban Village, the Queensland Government?s flagship urban renewal project. Employing human-centred and participatory design methods, Marcus and his team pioneer new interactive social networking systems informed by community, social and urban studies.

Since 2003, Marcus has (co-)authored over 50 publications. The high quality of his research output has attracted over $1.16M in national competitive grants from the Australian Research Council and industry in 2006 and 2007. He is a chief investigator on the projects New Media in the Urban Village: Mapping Communicative Ecologies & Socio-Economic Innovation in Emerging Inner-City Residential Developments, and Remembering the Past, Imagining the Future: Embedding Narrative and New Media in Urban Planning. He is lead chief investigator of Opportunities of Media and Communication Technology to Support Social Networks of Urban Residents in Mexico, South Africa, UK and Australia, and Swarms in Urban Villages: New Media Design to Augment Social Networks of Residents in Inner-City Developments. He is a member of the Australian Computer Society and the Executive Committee of the Association of Internet Researchers.

[Editor]

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