Paper by Eve Tsybina et al: “Smart cities improve citizen services by converting data into data-driven decisions. This conversion is not coincidental and depends on the underlying movement of information through four layers: devices, data communication and handling, operations, and planning and economics. Here we examine how this flow of information enables smartness in five major infrastructure sectors: transportation, energy, health, governance and municipal utilities. We show how success or failure within and between layers results in disparities in city smartness across different regions and sectors. Regions such as Europe and Asia exhibit higher levels of smartness compared to Africa and the USA. Furthermore, within one region, such as the USA or the Middle East, smarter cities manage the flow of information more efficiently. Sectors such as transportation and municipal utilities, characterized by extensive data, strong analytics and efficient information flow, tend to be smarter than healthcare and energy. The flow of information, however, generates risks associated with data collection and artificial intelligence deployment at each layer. We underscore the importance of seamless data transformation in achieving cost-effective and sustainable urban improvements and identify both supportive and impeding factors in the journey towards smarter cities…(More)”.
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