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      Big data, smart cities and city planning

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      Dialogues in Human Geography
      SAGE Publications
      big data, managing disruptions, new theory, real-time streaming, shorter time horizons, smart cities

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          Abstract

          I define big data with respect to its size but pay particular attention to the fact that the data I am referring to is urban data, that is, data for cities that are invariably tagged to space and time. I argue that this sort of data are largely being streamed from sensors, and this represents a sea change in the kinds of data that we have about what happens where and when in cities. I describe how the growth of big data is shifting the emphasis from longer term strategic planning to short-term thinking about how cities function and can be managed, although with the possibility that over much longer periods of time, this kind of big data will become a source for information about every time horizon. By way of conclusion, I illustrate the need for new theory and analysis with respect to 6 months of smart travel card data of individual trips on Greater London’s public transport systems.

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          Smart cities of the future

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            Is Open Access

            Quantifying the Advantage of Looking Forward

            We introduce a future orientation index to quantify the degree to which Internet users worldwide seek more information about years in the future than years in the past. We analyse Google logs and find a striking correlation between the country's GDP and the predisposition of its inhabitants to look forward.
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              Author and article information

              Journal
              Dialogues Hum Geogr
              Dialogues Hum Geogr
              DHG
              spdhg
              Dialogues in Human Geography
              SAGE Publications (Sage UK: London, England )
              2043-8206
              2043-8214
              10 December 2013
              November 2013
              : 3
              : 3
              : 274-279
              Affiliations
              [1-2043820613513390]University College London, UK
              Author notes
              [*]Michael Batty, Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis, University College London, Gower Street, London, WC1E 6BT, UK. Email: m.batty@ 123456ucl.ac.uk
              Article
              10.1177_2043820613513390
              10.1177/2043820613513390
              5808818
              29472982
              4a9dbc52-893c-499e-9285-082ba2578f78
              © The Author(s) 2013
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              big data,managing disruptions,new theory,real-time streaming,shorter time horizons,smart cities

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