Academic literature on the topic 'Smart Prosperity'

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Journal articles on the topic "Smart Prosperity"

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Karagulyan, E. A., O. V. Zakharova, M. V. Batyreva, and D. L. Dusseault. "Smart City — Prosperity for All?" Zhurnal Economicheskoj Teorii 17, no. 3 (2020): 657–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.31063/2073-6517/2020.17-3.11.

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Alfachruddin, M. Nabil Fahd. "IMPLEMENTASI ALGORITMA FUZZY TIPE-2 UNTUK PENENTUAN KRITERIA KOTA BERDASARKAN STANDAR SMART CITY." MATICS 11, no. 2 (2020): 62. http://dx.doi.org/10.18860/mat.v11i2.8475.

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<p class="Text">City is a role model which represents the advancement of technology and the existence of prosperity. An improvement of technology should be used as a key to manage city’s prosperity. Many standards used to measure the value of city’s prosperity. One of that standards is smart city standard. It used factors which define city’s prosperity, hence it needs a key factor that allows the standard to produce a crisp result from the available factors. There are 6 key variables of city’s prosperity of smart city standard, they are smat governance, smart mobility, smart people, smart economy, smart environment dan smart mobility. Type-2 fuzzy algorithm is used to determine city prosperity’ grade using smart city standard. The algorithm is implemented in a game of Malang city’s miniature which named after Malang Urban. In this research several in-game experiments are made to get values that meet a specified rules. The values consist 73,33% of not ready category, 6, 67% of standard category, and 20% of good smart category of all in-game attempts.</p>
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Cao, Zhibin. "Smart City: Digital Technology Drives Livability and Prosperity." IEEE Internet of Things Magazine 3, no. 1 (2020): 2–3. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/miot.2020.9063395.

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de Almeida Fagundes, Cinthia, and Lindon Fonseca Matias. "Smart Cities: Contradictions Yet Opportunities for a Better Urban World." Human Geography 11, no. 1 (2018): 19–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/194277861801100102.

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This article presents a critical analysis of the “smart city” concept. The argument focuses on contradictions in the symbols of urban prosperity, unraveling of the social agents involved and their interests, and an investigation of the processes resulting from investments in technology and innovation selectively performed in a territory. We propose three approaches for understanding the smart city project, in the light of analytical resources provided by the Brazilian geographer Milton Santos. Through these analyses we point to the strengths and weaknesses of the concept.
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Yu, Miao, Jianwei Zhuge, Ming Cao, Zhiwei Shi, and Lin Jiang. "A Survey of Security Vulnerability Analysis, Discovery, Detection, and Mitigation on IoT Devices." Future Internet 12, no. 2 (2020): 27. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/fi12020027.

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With the prosperity of the Internet of Things (IoT) industry environment, the variety and quantity of IoT devices have grown rapidly. IoT devices have been widely used in smart homes, smart wear, smart manufacturing, smart cars, smart medical care, and many other life-related fields. With it, security vulnerabilities of IoT devices are emerging endlessly. The proliferation of security vulnerabilities will bring severe risks to users’ privacy and property. This paper first describes the research background, including IoT architecture, device components, and attack surfaces. We review state-of-the-art research on IoT device vulnerability discovery, detection, mitigation, and other related works. Then, we point out the current challenges and opportunities by evaluation. Finally, we forecast and discuss the research directions on vulnerability analysis techniques of IoT devices.
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Mulyawan, Hayati Sari Hasibuan, and Ahyahudin Sodri. "The Use of Webgis as an Implementation of Smart Sustainable Cities Concept in Parepare City, South Sulawesi." E3S Web of Conferences 202 (2020): 05012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202020205012.

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The New Urban Agenda will focus on Smart Cities and Sustainable Cities. The smart city is a smart city concept designed to support various community activities and provide easy access to information for the public. Under the smart city agenda, presently, many government agencies are attempting to engineer an urban transformation to tackle urban prosperity, live ability, and sustainability issues mostly through the means of technology solutions. This study aims to formulate a website on land use. The method used in this study begins with a study of the literature to find indicators for Smart City. After determining the indicators and benchmarks for the smart city of Parepare City, the survey of the required data is carried out, the processing of survey data and the analysis and evaluation of current conditions. After learning about the current state of the city of Parepare, the website-gis formulations were carried out as one of the instruments of the smart city. Smart City is one of the new city development and management strategies. This WEBGIS displays the distribution of land use. This model should be a tool used by the Municipality of Parepare to develop land use policies.
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Angelidou, M., E. Karachaliou, T. Angelidou, and E. Stylianidis. "CULTURAL HERITAGE IN SMART CITY ENVIRONMENTS." ISPRS - International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences XLII-2/W5 (August 18, 2017): 27–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/isprs-archives-xlii-2-w5-27-2017.

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This paper investigates how the historical and cultural heritage of cities is and can be underpinned by means of smart city tools, solutions and applications. Smart cities stand for a conceptual technology-and-innovation driven urban development model. By becoming ‘smart’, cities seek to achieve prosperity, effectiveness and competitiveness on multiple socio-economic levels. Although cultural heritage is one of the many issues addressed by existing smart city strategies, and despite the documented bilateral benefits, our research about the positioning of urban cultural heritage within three smart city strategies (Barcelona, Amsterdam, and London) reveals fragmented approaches. Our findings suggest that the objective of cultural heritage promotion is not substantially addressed in the investigated smart city strategies. Nevertheless, we observe that cultural heritage management can be incorporated in several different strategic areas of the smart city, reflecting different lines of thinking and serving an array of goals, depending on the case. We conclude that although potential applications and approaches abound, cultural heritage currently stands for a mostly unexploited asset, presenting multiple integration opportunities within smart city contexts. We prompt for further research into bridging the two disciplines and exploiting a variety of use cases with the purpose of enriching the current knowledge base at the intersection of cultural heritage and smart cities.
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Kolodii, Nataliia A., Vera S. Ivanova, and Natalia A. Goncharova. "Smart City: The Concept and its Adaptation to the Russian Context." Sociological Journal 26 (2020): 102–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.19181/socjour.2020.26.2.7268.

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The article investigates the concept of a smart city mainly focused around people. At the same time, a “smart city” is understood to be an innovative city which implements a set of technical solutions and organizational measures aimed at achieving the highest possible quality of human life, an adequate resource management and service delivery system, in order to create sustainable favorable living conditions, as well as the prosperity and business activity of current and future generations. The general and specific (for Russia) factors that determined the transition from “smart cities” to “human-centered smart cities” are highlighted. Human-centered smart cities are cities in which governments attract citizens by being open to partnership with citizens, supporting the collaborative design of technical and social innovation processes through mutual relationships based on mutual trust and cooperation. A system of expert assessments is analyzed, which indicates the possibilities for transitioning to the digitalization of the economy and the city, the possibilities for developing breakthrough information and social technologies that would ensure movement towards Human Smart cites.
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McColm, Helen. "Smart Regulation: The European Commission’s Updated Strategy." European Journal of Risk Regulation 2, no. 1 (2011): 9–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1867299x00000568.

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On 8 October 2010, the European Commission issued a communication paper on Smart Regulation in the European Union. The paper reports on progress made, future priorities and strategy in the field of regulatory reform, for the information of interested outsiders. It is the latest in a series of such communications, issued on a regular basis since the first major, systematic action plan in 2002.However, this most recent communication comes at a time when the context has changed noticeably. First, the financial crisis sparked by the credit crunch has altered attitudes to regulation. More attention is now being paid to the effectiveness of regulation and its overall quality than before. The Communication acknowledges this and underlines that regulation is essential to ensure that markets deliver sustainable prosperity for all. Second, a number of the Commission’s tools have been in place for some time, allowing it to draw useful lessons from its own experiences as well as from those of other countries. Its impact assessment system recently underwent a major examination by the European Court of Auditors.
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Kurtovic, Safet, Boris Siljkovic, and Nikola Pavlovic. "Methods of Identification and Evaluation of Brownfield Sites." International Journal of Research in Business and Social Science (2147-4478) 3, no. 2 (2014): 105–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.20525/ijrbs.v3i2.101.

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The basic objective of this paper was to determine the importance and potential restoration of brownfield sites in terms of economic prosperity of a particular region or country. In addition, in a theoretical sense, this paper presents the methods used in the identification of brownfield sites such as Smart Growth Network model and Thomas GIS model, and methods for evaluation of brownfield sites or the indexing method, cost-benefit and multivariate analysis.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Smart Prosperity"

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McCartney, Kevin. "Pricing air to starve the fire: an institutional ethnography of smart prosperity." Thesis, 2018. https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/10001.

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Smart Prosperity (SP) brings together multi-sectoral business leaders, policy experts, unions and progressive NGO change makers to align Canada’s civil society messaging on climate change action and policy. SP has recently found national relevance thanks to considerable policy uptake by Justin Trudeau’s ruling federal Liberal party. Rooted in a neoclassical economic model of demand-management, SP positions themselves as the architects of an energy transition regime of consumer price signals. This study examines 118 of SP’s academic and policy reports from 2008 to 2018 using an institutional ethnographic approach to textual analysis to consider the ideological and ontological consequences of SP’s policy program for the tender geographies of communities in Canada. SP is found to contrive a terrain of energy possibilities that rests on administrative abstraction, economism and market fetishism, and which places the economic administrator at the heart of Canada’s social and natural relations.<br>Graduate
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Books on the topic "Smart Prosperity"

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Smart growth: Critical choices for business continuity and prosperity. Jossey-Bass, 1989.

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Poza, Ernesto J. Smart growth: Critical choices for business continuity and prosperity. Jossey-Bass, 1989.

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1950-, Link Greg, and Merrill Rebecca R, eds. Smart trust: Creating prosperity, energy and joy in a low-trust world. Free Press, 2011.

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Stone, David A. Mastering the business of architecture: A street-smart, hard-knocks guide to success, prosperity and profit in your architectural practice. Impact Initiatives, Inc., 1999.

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Brain, Brad. Prosperity: Making Smart, Strategic Decisions about Money. Brad Brain Financial Planning Inc., 2017.

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Lisa, Kueng, ed. Picture your prosperity: Smart money moves to turn your vision into reality. 2015.

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Brown, Phillip, Hugh Lauder, and Sin Yi Cheung. The Death of Human Capital? Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190644307.001.0001.

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Human capital theory, the notion that there is a direct relationship between educational investment and individual and national prosperity, has dominated public policy on education and labor for the past fifty years. This book describes the development of human capital theory and why it has turned into a failed revolution. It outlines an alternative theory that re-defines human capital in an age of smart machines. The new human capital rejects the view that automation and AI will result in the end of waged work, but sees the fundamental problem as a lack of quality jobs offering interesting, worthwhile and rewarding opportunities. At stake in the new human capital are the future prospects for individual wellbeing in productive, sustainable and inclusive societies. It also connects with a growing sense that capitalism is in crisis, felt by students and the wider workforce, in offering a sober assessment of current realities at the same time as a sense of hope for the future.
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Book chapters on the topic "Smart Prosperity"

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Likar, Borut. "Managing Innovation in Smart Industries." In Engines of Economic Prosperity. Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-76088-5_2.

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Höfer, Andreas, Erhard Esl, Daniel Türk, and Veronika Hüttinger. "Conception and Development of a Last Mile Vehicle for Urban Areas." In Small Electric Vehicles. Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-65843-4_13.

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AbstractIn megacities, increasing globalization effects are leading to rapidly increasing prosperity and augmented purchasing power, and thus to a growing need for punctual, cost-effective, and environmentally friendly delivery of goods. A smart, small electric vehicle concept is presented that targets on meeting the requirements for the delivery of goods in urban areas and that is designed especially for the delivery on the last mile. This last mile vehicle (LMV) for cargo transportation is attached to a truck. Whenever it is needed, for example to deliver goods into narrow streets, in pedestrian areas or in case of traffic jams, it can be unfolded and unloaded from the truck and hereby guarantees a flexible and punctual delivery of goods. This flexible on-time delivery is possible because the last mile vehicle is designed, so that the legal regulations of the non-motorized vehicle lane, that is everywhere to be found in Asia, are met. The vehicle is designed with three wheels, a range of 40-60 km and an electric drive train with a continuous power of 2 × 250 W that enables a maximum speed up to 40 km/h of the vehicle. The drive train consists of a battery pack that can be charged electrically from the truck, two inverters, and two electric wheel hub motors. The LMV has been designed and constructed as a prototype and has been tested on non-public roads to prove the vehicle concept. For Europe, it can be classified as an L2e vehicle and with slight modifications; it can be applied on European roads as well.
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Agarwal, Pankaj, Vijander Singh, G. L. Saini, and Deepak Panwar. "Sustainable Smart-Farming Framework." In Advances in Environmental Engineering and Green Technologies. IGI Global, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-5909-2.ch007.

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Agriculture and allied activities play a vital role in a country's economic prosperity. The conventional methods in agricultural practices have become insufficient to cater to the increasing needs. To fulfill the demands, new technologies are to be introduced to raise agricultural standards. Over the past few years, there has been significant interest in designing smart agricultural systems. The manageability of agricultural frameworks has turned into a noteworthy concentration for discusses about future human survival. A significant part of the contention seems to depend on shortsighted understanding of biological models and flops enough to define what maintainability goals are being looked for. To adapt to the undeniably multifaceted nature and between connectedness of current cultivating frameworks with regards to globalization and potential bothers like environmental change, we require a pluralistic way to deal with strategy, which can adapt to the abnormal amounts of vulnerability in these territories and which enables most extreme flexibility of reaction to evolving conditions.
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Yigzaw, Gedifew Sewenet. "Collaborative Governance." In Examining the Socio-Technical Impact of Smart Cities. IGI Global, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-5326-8.ch001.

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In this 21st century, collaborative governance has got a great attention to resolve socio-economic problems and assure sustainable development goals. It is a new form of governance in which multi-stakeholders, such as the public agencies, private sectors, civil society organizations and international public organizations are working together to build trust in government, resolve societal challenges, assure economic prosperity and development, and bring institutional transformation. This book chapter describes the theoretical and conceptual perspectives of collaborative governance. The author believed that giving some insights on the collaborative governance; conceptual understanding, the dynamics and importance of collaborative governance for building the smart cities, its nexus with development, and measurement parameters for checking its effectiveness, could produce a theoretical and conceptual asset for the other authors who want to make an in-depth investigation on the areas of governance.
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Santos, Herman Resende, and Dany Flávio Tonelli. "Smart Government and the Maturity Levels of Sociopolitical Digital Interactions." In Advances in Electronic Government, Digital Divide, and Regional Development. IGI Global, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-6204-7.ch008.

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The emerging concept of smart government has a deep connection with the capacity to equalize high levels of performance and responsiveness in order to promote and enable development and prosperity. The expansion of public space towards the digital environment and increasing contextual complexity push governments to new perspectives concerning political and administrative dimensions. The capacity to interact virtually with citizens leads to the concept of sociopolitical digital interactions and the exploration of a conceptual framework called sociopolitical digital interactions' maturity (SDIM) directed the conducting of this study through a qualitative methodological approach. A comparative content analysis of the 27 Brazilian states' government websites was structured on 2013 and 2018 verifications. In this lapse time, the poor adoption of crowdsourcing digital tools denoted low governmental capacity to explore collective intelligence as well as an unwillingness concerning the adoption of citizen-centric models and a lack of openness to co-creative interaction processes.
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Kashyap, Ramgopal. "Miracles of Healthcare With Internet of Things." In Smart Devices, Applications, and Protocols for the IoT. IGI Global, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-7811-6.ch007.

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Today, IoT in therapeutic administrations has ended up being more productive in light of the fact that the correspondence among authorities and patients has been improved with versatile applications. These applications are made by the associations with the objective that the pros can screen the patient's prosperity. If any issue has hopped out at the patient, the authority approaches the patient and gives the correct treatment. In this proposition, particular focus is given to infant human administrations, in light of the fact that the greatest fear of gatekeepers is that they would lose their infant kids at whatever point. Therefore, a business contraption has been recognized which screens consistent information about the infant's heart rate, oxygen levels, resting position. In case anything happens to the infant, the information will get to the adaptable application which has been made by an association and is mechanically available by finishing a representation field test for the kid.
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Alizadeh, Tooran, and Neil Sipe. "Vancouver's Digital Strategy." In Digital Multimedia. IGI Global, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-3822-6.ch073.

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A growing number of cities have started to realize the need to be ‘smart', to use digital technology to drive prosperity and capitalize on the rapidly growing digital economy. Some local governments have developed ‘urban digital strategies' to speed up the pace of change, and to move their digital planning from ad-hoc to an integrated and strategic approach. This paper examines Vancouver's Digital Strategy (VDS) and questions the role defined for this new piece of strategy. The findings represent competing views – offered by local government versus digital business community - for the role of digital in two areas of governance, and strategic planning. The paper concludes by suggesting that urban digital strategies need be incorporated into strategic urban and regional planning with a focus on the biggest issues, specific to each city.
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Conference papers on the topic "Smart Prosperity"

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Hirtranusi, Sulistyo Aris, Suhono Harso Supangkat, Raymond Kosala, and Benny Ranti. "The Governance Strategies To Build Smart City Towards Digital Prosperity." In 2019 International Conference on ICT for Smart Society (ICISS). IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iciss48059.2019.8969833.

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Curley, Martin. "Keynote speakers: Open innovation 2.0 and digital technology; The new paradigm for prosperity and sustainable intelligent living." In 2016 3rd MEC International Conference on Big Data and Smart City (ICBDSC). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icbdsc.2016.7460271.

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Janse van Rensburg, Nickey, Warren Hurter, and Naude Malan. "A Systems Design Approach to Appropriate, Smart Technology in a Youth Agriculture Initiative." In ASME 2016 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2016-67139.

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A transformative research paradigm is imbedded in knowledge mobilization processes involving close collaboration between researchers and the community. The research presents the development of an integrated, connected food ecosystem that, because of its fundamental design and use of appropriate, smart technology, which tends to naturally create inclusion and prosperity opportunities for many and not simply for the few. The research relies on multi-stakeholder participation to develop appropriate technologies to enhance economic activity amongst unemployed youths in Johannesburg, South Africa. A human-centered, systems engineering approach to develop a pilot project that promotes integrated, online, technologically supported food system is presented. The research is also concerned with how to measure the impact of the intervention the on food resilience as a result of urban farming. This paper presents the systems analysis of the current local food network and the proposed integrated solutions for a pilot project to establish a minimal viable project that can be tested. The research describes the planning and implementation of a pilot project as a minimal viable product to test in the market.
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Escalfoni, Rafael, and Jonice Oliveira. "Coral: A Framework based on Social Network Analysis to Support the Startup Ecosystem Management." In Anais Estendidos do Simpósio Brasileiro de Sistemas de Informação. Sociedade Brasileira de Computação (SBC), 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5753/sbsi.2021.15366.

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Startup ecosystems are business communities continually unfolding where different actors interact in symbiotic activities to create mutual benefits. A smart startup ecosystem demands an understanding of the interests, capabilities, and affinities among members to take harmony and ensure the group's prosperity. The absence of such mechanisms would compromise the innovation process efficiency, and the environmental imbalance might lead to behaviors harmful to each participant's community to identify convergences and possible partnerships that can help in the development of new business. From this problem, our main contribution is the Coral framework - a social network analysis approach to assist in evaluating relationships in communities. Based on a set of two observational studies in industrial cases, we verified that it is possible to describe the social and material aspects needed to enhance integration and provide greater network efficiency.
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Nair, Anju Vijayan, Anand Balu Nellippallil, Ashok K. Das, John Hall, Janet K. Allen, and Farrokh Mistree. "Identifying Sustainable Solutions for Sanitation, Energy, and Water Needs in Off-Grid Indian Villages." In ASME 2020 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2020-22507.

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Abstract Food, energy, and water are the significant factors necessary for the social and economic well-being and prosperity of people, particularly to accelerate rural development. In order to attain sustainable development in off-grid villages, the issues associated with the Food-Energy-Water (FEW) nexus must be addressed with respect to social, economic and environmental aspects. SunMoksha, a socio-technical enterprise, has proposed a model that includes smart technical solutions or intelligent assets, such as, Smart AQUAnet™, Smart Nanogrid™, Smart MEZ™, etc., addressing food, energy and water needs in off-grid villages. Its development model allows for multiple sustainable solutions to be introduced into the rural community, to address specific needs as the community moves up in the development process. In this paper, a method is presented to identify such sustainable smart solutions. The method involves the use of the dilemma triangle and Go/No-Go analysis to address the needs in off-grid Indian villages. We demonstrate the efficacy of the method by first identifying the key issues in an Indian off-grid village from the perspective of the FEW nexus using the dilemma triangle construct. A Go/No-Go analysis is used to select the best feasible solution from a set of possible solutions addressing the dilemmas and issues. Additionally, the needs for sanitation in the village is also considered in the analysis, keeping in mind the health and well-beings of the communities. The method is generic and will support stakeholders/decision-makers in identifying and selecting the best suitable solution from a set of potential solutions. The method is illustrated for an off-grid village to identify an intelligent asset to simultaneously address the sanitation, energy and water needs.
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Yan, Rui, and Dongyan Zhao. "Smarter Response with Proactive Suggestion: A New Generative Neural Conversation Paradigm." In Twenty-Seventh International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence {IJCAI-18}. International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence Organization, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.24963/ijcai.2018/629.

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Conversational systems are becoming more and more promising by playing an important role in human-computer communications. A conversational system is supposed to be intelligent to enable human-like interactions. The long-term goal of smart human-computer conversations is challenging and heavily driven by data. Thanks to the prosperity of Web 2.0, a large volume of conversational data become available to establish human-computer conversational systems. Given a human issued message, namely a query, a traditional conversational system would provide a response after proper training of how to respond like humans. In this paper, we propose a new paradigm for neural generative conversations: smarter response with a suggestion is provided given the query. We assume that the new conversation mode which proactively introduces contents as next utterances, keeping user actively engaged. To address the task, we propose a novel integrated model to handle both the response generation and the suggestion generation. From the experimental results, we verify the effectiveness of the new neural generative conversation paradigm.
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Chauca, Mario. "Strategies for Agent-based Decision Optimization for Smart Energy Solutions Adoption." In The 18th LACCEI International Multi-Conference for Engineering, Education, and Technology: Engineering, Integration, And Alliances for A Sustainable Development” “Hemispheric Cooperation for Competitiveness and Prosperity on A Knowledge-Based Economy”. Latin American and Caribbean Consortium of Engineering Institutions, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.18687/laccei2020.1.1.509.

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Li, Chao, and Doreen Kobelo. "Design of “Smart Car Seat” to Prevent Heat Related Deaths of Children Left Alone inside Cars." In The 18th LACCEI International Multi-Conference for Engineering, Education, and Technology: Engineering, Integration, And Alliances for A Sustainable Development” “Hemispheric Cooperation for Competitiveness and Prosperity on A Knowledge-Based Economy”. Latin American and Caribbean Consortium of Engineering Institutions, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.18687/laccei2020.1.1.358.

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Cutipa-Luque, John, Edson Lozano-Laffore, Manuel Silvera, and Fernando Campos. "Evaluation of the Operational Behavior of a Cloverleaf Applying Smart Traffic Lights with the Ramp Metering Methodology." In The 18th LACCEI International Multi-Conference for Engineering, Education, and Technology: Engineering, Integration, And Alliances for A Sustainable Development” “Hemispheric Cooperation for Competitiveness and Prosperity on A Knowledge-Based Economy”. Latin American and Caribbean Consortium of Engineering Institutions, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.18687/laccei2020.1.1.546.

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Reports on the topic "Smart Prosperity"

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Susantono, Bambang, and Robert Guild, eds. Creating Livable Asian Cities. Asian Development Bank, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.22617/sgp210110.

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This book explores how Asia’s fast-growing cities can fulfil their potential as engines of economic prosperity and provide a livable environment for all citizens. But for this to happen, major challenges that reduce urban communities’ quality of life and economic opportunities must be addressed. These include poor planning, a lack of affordable housing, inequalities, pollution, climate vulnerabilities, and urban infrastructure deficits. The book’s 19 articles unwrap these challenges and present solutions focused on smart and inclusive planning, sustainable transport and energy, innovative financing, and resilience and rejuvenation.
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