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Träfflista för sökning "WFRF:(Holst Marita) srt2:(2015-2017)"

Search: WFRF:(Holst Marita) > (2015-2017)

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1.
  • Chochliouros, Joannis, et al. (author)
  • Enabling crowd-sourcing-based privacy risk assessment in EU : the privacy flag project
  • 2017
  • In: PCI 2017. - New York : ACM Digital Library. - 9781450353557
  • Conference paper (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Personal data have become merchandisable asset encouraging stakeholders to collect and trade them without end-user's awareness and acceptance. Although EU is adapting the legal framework, the extent of applications most of which are developed from outside the EU jurisdiction, strongly limit the possibility to effectively impose a privacy-protection framework globally. The Privacy Rag project researches and combines the potential of crowds ourcing, ICT technologies and legal expertise for enabling citizens monitoring and controlling their privacy1.
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2.
  • Guillén, Sergio, et al. (author)
  • IoT European Large-Scale Pilots – Integration, Experimentation and Testing
  • 2017
  • In: Cognitive Hyperconnected Digital Transformation. - New York : Taylor & Francis. ; , s. 221-282
  • Book chapter (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The IoT European Large-Scale Pilots Programme includes the innovation consortia that are collaborating to foster the deployment of IoT solutions in Europe through the integration of advanced IoT technologies across the value chain, demonstration of multiple IoT applications at scale and in a usage context, and as close as possible to operational conditions.The programme projects are targeted, goal-driven initiatives that propose IoT approaches to specific real-life industrial/societal challenges. They are autonomous entities that involve stakeholders from the supply side to the demand side, and contain all the technological and innovation elements, the tasks related to the use, application and deployment as well as the development, testing and integration activities.This chapter describes the IoT Large Scale Pilot Programme initiative together with all involved actors. These actors include the coordination and support actions CREATE-IoT and U4IoT, being them drivers of the programme, and all five IoT Large-Scale Pilot projects, namely ACTIVAGE, IoF2020, MONICA, SynchroniCity and AUTOPILOT.ot projects, namely ACTIVAGE,IoF2020, MONICA, SynchroniCity and AUTOPILOT.
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4.
  • Ståhlbröst, Anna, 1967-, et al. (author)
  • Living Lab : Stimulating Adoption of Smart City Innovations
  • 2016
  • In: Open Living Lab Days 2016. - Montreal : European Network of Living Lab. - 9789082102758 ; , s. 145-162
  • Conference paper (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Cities are facing complex and widespread problems such as changing demographics, reduction of resources and climate changes, unequal social participation, overfilled transport networks, and difficult trade-offs in land use decisions can only be turned into opportunities if suitable strategies are applied. To facilitate the efforts related to creating and sustaining smart city development, supportive infrastructures and innovative eco-systems need to be implemented and used, and one such infrastructure can be the concept of Living Labs. These Living Labs deploy contemporary open and user driven innovation processes into real world contexts in which all relevant stakeholders are involved and engaged with the endeavour to create and experiment with innovations. In this paper, we will illustrate and discuss a Living Lab approach focusing on a way to stimulate adoption of smart cities innovations among citizens in their domestic context and thus lowering their energy consumption. Our findings show that applying a Living Lab approach for adoption of innovation was successful in several ways. By stimulating participants to use the socio-technical solution in their context by assigning them well-defined tasks, participants both increased their understanding of the socio-technical solution, they changed their behaviour and they fulfilled the purpose of the technology. Hence, applying an interactive Living Lab approach in innovation processes can strengthen the adoption of smart city solutions.
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5.
  • Ståhlbröst, Anna, 1967-, et al. (author)
  • Reflecting on Actions in Living Lab Research
  • 2017
  • In: Technology Innovation Management Review. - : Carleton University. - 1927-0321. ; 7:2, s. 27-34
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Living labs deploy contemporary open and user-centred engagement processes in real-world contexts where all relevant stakeholders are involved and engaged with the endeavour to create and experiment with different innovations. The approach is evidently successful and builds on the perspective that people have a democratic right to have influence over changes that might affect them, such as those brought about by an innovation. In this article, we will reflect on and discuss a case in which end users took part in the development of a method that stimulates learning and adoption of digital innovations in their own homes while testing and interacting with it. The results show that, when end users were stimulated to use the implemented innovation through different explicit assignments, they both increased their understanding of the situation as well as changed their behaviour. Living lab processes are complex and dynamic, and we find that it is essential that a living lab have the capability to adjust its roles and actions. We argue that being reflective is beneficial for innovation process managers in living labs because it allows them to adjust processes in response to dynamic circumstances.
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  • Result 1-5 of 5

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