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Local Warming - SENSEable City Lab at MIT
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Local Warming is a research project by MIT SENSEable City Laboratory that dynamically controls highly localized heating: It is a system that puts the heat where the people are.
SENSEable City Lab at MIT Situated at the intersection of architecture, urban design, engineering, human-computer interaction and the social sciences, the MIT Senseable City Laboratory investigates and anticipates changes in the relationship between cities, new technologies and citizens. The Lab brings together MIT researchers and external organizations: partner cities offer test cases, industry provide technical expertise and funding, and the lab unites public and private sectors with a shared vision of the future. Since 2004, the Lab's has 72 completed projects, 383 scientific publications and been covered over 1,000 times by global media and press outlets, with feature stories appearing in The New York Times, The Economist, NPR, BBC, CNN, Wired, and many more. The work of the Lab has been exhibited globally, including at the Venice Biennale, the MoMA New York, and the Guggenheim Lab Berlin. For more information on the lab's work, visit senseable.mit.edu
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Spring Spree - SENSEable City Lab at MIT
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The Senseable City Lab together with leading Spanish bank BBVA embarked on an examination of expenditure patterns and urban analysis at large, using an unprecedented dataset of financial transactions. The study illustrates purchasing patterns across Spain during Easter 2011.
SENSEable City Lab at MIT Situated at the intersection of architecture, urban design, engineering, human-computer interaction and the social sciences, the MIT Senseable City Laboratory investigates and anticipates changes in the relationship between cities, new technologies and citizens. The Lab brings together MIT researchers and external organizations: partner cities offer test cases, industry provide technical expertise and funding, and the lab unites public and private sectors with a shared vision of the future. Since 2004, the Lab's has 72 completed projects, 383 scientific publications and been covered over 1,000 times by global media and press outlets, with feature stories appearing in The New York Times, The Economist, NPR, BBC, CNN, Wired, and many more. The work of the Lab has been exhibited globally, including at the Venice Biennale, the MoMA New York, and the Guggenheim Lab Berlin. For more information on the lab's work, visit senseable.mit.edu
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The Connected States of America - SENSEable City Lab at MIT
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The Connected States of America illustrates the emerging communities based on the social interactions through the use of anonymized mobile phone data. The constant flux of people commuting, migrating, and travelling across the country establishes connections which are dominated by large cities. The social connections woven across the United States can be used to define communities, where the glue that holds a community together is a stronger relationship with other members of the same community compared to members of other communities.
SENSEable City Lab at MIT Situated at the intersection of architecture, urban design, engineering, human-computer interaction and the social sciences, the MIT Senseable City Laboratory investigates and anticipates changes in the relationship between cities, new technologies and citizens. The Lab brings together MIT researchers and external organizations: partner cities offer test cases, industry provide technical expertise and funding, and the lab unites public and private sectors with a shared vision of the future. Since 2004, the Lab's has 72 completed projects, 383 scientific publications and been covered over 1,000 times by global media and press outlets, with feature stories appearing in The New York Times, The Economist, NPR, BBC, CNN, Wired, and many more. The work of the Lab has been exhibited globally, including at the Venice Biennale, the MoMA New York, and the Guggenheim Lab Berlin. For more information on the lab's work, visit senseable.mit.edu
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MOMA - Follow up - SENSEable City Lab at MIT
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Old electronic equipment that was programmed by MIT researchers to report back information about their environment for a project at MoMA – The Museum of Modern Art in New York, has found an unexpected second life.
SENSEable City Lab at MIT Situated at the intersection of architecture, urban design, engineering, human-computer interaction and the social sciences, the MIT Senseable City Laboratory investigates and anticipates changes in the relationship between cities, new technologies and citizens. The Lab brings together MIT researchers and external organizations: partner cities offer test cases, industry provide technical expertise and funding, and the lab unites public and private sectors with a shared vision of the future. Since 2004, the Lab's has 72 completed projects, 383 scientific publications and been covered over 1,000 times by global media and press outlets, with feature stories appearing in The New York Times, The Economist, NPR, BBC, CNN, Wired, and many more. The work of the Lab has been exhibited globally, including at the Venice Biennale, the MoMA New York, and the Guggenheim Lab Berlin. For more information on the lab's work, visit senseable.mit.edu
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Trash Track - SENSEable City Lab at MIT
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Elaborated by the SENSEable City Lab and inspired by the NYC Green Initiative, TrashTrack focuses on how pervasive technologies can expose the challenges of waste management and sustainability. TrashTrack uses hundreds of small, smart, location aware tags: a first step towards the deployment of smart-dust - networks of tiny locatable and addressable microeletromechanical systems.These tags are attached to different types of trash so that these items can be followed through the city’s waste management system, revealing the final journey of our everyday objects in a series of real time visualizations.
SENSEable City Lab at MIT Situated at the intersection of architecture, urban design, engineering, human-computer interaction and the social sciences, the MIT Senseable City Laboratory investigates and anticipates changes in the relationship between cities, new technologies and citizens. The Lab brings together MIT researchers and external organizations: partner cities offer test cases, industry provide technical expertise and funding, and the lab unites public and private sectors with a shared vision of the future. Since 2004, the Lab's has 72 completed projects, 383 scientific publications and been covered over 1,000 times by global media and press outlets, with feature stories appearing in The New York Times, The Economist, NPR, BBC, CNN, Wired, and many more. The work of the Lab has been exhibited globally, including at the Venice Biennale, the MoMA New York, and the Guggenheim Lab Berlin. For more information on the lab's work, visit senseable.mit.edu