www.isi.ac

ISI Journals

(International Scientific Indexing)

(Institute for Scientific Information)

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND CLOUD COMPUTING ALTERING THE SEARCHING AND TRAINING OF INVOLVED URBAN PLANNING

Open PDF in Browser
International Journal of Science and Information System, 2019

Autour(s)

  • Ladson Newiduom, Keypi Jackson and Ibrina Browndi

Abstract

Technological change has greatly impacted everyday life. In Finland, for example, Nokia and the mobile phone technology have enjoyed a similar position as a national vehicle for economic and social change, as the tractor in the Soviet Union, in the 1950 ́s. Information and communication technologies (ICTs) have transformed the way people communicate and interact with one another. It has brought, not only new ways of socializing, consuming and producing services and experiencing places, but also new forms of citizenship, activism and political sense making. Everyday life has become increasingly global, due to the availability of the Internet and other digital tools that enable local people to communicate with the rest of the world both individually and as a community Consequently, urban planning and the methods for citizen participation in complex urban issues should also be changing. Digital tools invite people to experience urban space in new ways. The massive invasion of IPhone, web 2.0, navigation and digital mapping tools, such as Google Earth, GIS and 3D-modelling, have expanded the limits of our understanding and deploying space. The new extensions of comprehension are, for instance, the augmentation of reality with context-aware information and the virtual exploration of environments and communities The use and deployment of urban informatics is part of everyday life, for example, when we navigate during the rush hour with context-aware traffic information. The massive movement of digitalization has augmented the role of the user, and left government and civil servants gasping their breath. Previously, planners and professionals were the producers and users of urban information. Currently, the users are also co-producers of urban information. The talent and the mass of user groups create the value of digital applications. The most sophisticated applications have so far had little to do with urban planning. On the contrary, most applications have been made for leisure purposes, such as playing games, tourism, entertainment or shopping. However, urban planning should find a niche in this evolution. It should be concerned with, how to take advantage of urban and community informatics, how to use them in agile analyses or forecasts of urban issues. New methods should also be created which can enhance the application of the gadgets in urban planning, public participation and decision- making. Then, urban planning could step out and make a statement, why it is relevant in the digital era. In practice, the development and use of ICTs reflect a dispersed field of interests and capabilities. Some users are better equipped and they have better skills in technology. In the countries of high technology, the use of ICTs is more often a matter of the chosen perspective, objective and social values. It has become a self- evident part of everyday life, although the technologies are used varyingly in different walks of life. Applications of different ICTs seem to be inaccessible, difficult to use and sometimes even overlapping, when the knowledge of the mutual benefits and overall purpose are missing. This is familiar to the endeavours of academics too. Digital tools and urban informatics provide a playground for research and development within several different disciplines, such as geography, computing sciences, engineering, social sciences, architecture and environmental psychology, just to name a few. Each discipline is developing software programs and applications of its own. Even within an interdisciplinary approach, professionals solely tend to produce targeted knowledge and tools in a certain field of interest. Consequently, extensive understanding of the digital tools and methodology in urban planning has not yet emerged.

About ISI Journals:

www.isi.ac is a comprehensive and advanced platform for researchers and scientific authors, providing access to thousands of reputable ISI Journals and precise citation data. The platform enables professional analysis of key metrics such as Impact Factor, H-index, Journal Ranking, and Citation Analysis, supporting the evaluation of Research Impact and Research Visibility. With Journal Citation Reports and other Scholarly Metrics, it guides users in journal selection, optimizing publication strategies, and informed research decisions. The Publishing & Submission process includes Peer Review, adherence to Author Guidelines, Manuscript Preparation, and Publication Timeline tracking, with flexible Open Access and Close Access options. Standards of Research Quality & Ethics, including Plagiarism Check, Editorial Board oversight, Research Methodology, and Literature Review support, along with Digital Object Identifier (DOI) assignment, ensure high-quality, traceable publications. Researchers can maximize their scientific impact through Research Citation management, Research Collaboration, and Research Funding opportunities. By publishing in journals affiliated with www.isi.ac and its parallel platform www.isi.report, authors gain higher chances of Indexing and international visibility, with multiple formats available in physical and online versions. These platforms play a pivotal role in advancing research quality, enhancing Research Visibility and Research Impact, and guiding researchers toward scientific growth and recognition.

Special thanks to:

(Elsevier, Science Direct, Springer, Springer Nature, Wiley, Taylor & Francis, Nature Publishing Group (Nature journals), Oxford University Press, Cambridge University Press, SAGE Publications, CRC Press, Pearson Education, McGraw Hill, Cengage, Wolters Kluwer, IEEE Standards Association, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), Association for Computing Machinery, American Chemical Society (ACS), Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC), Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM), American National Standards Institute, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, American Society of Civil Engineers, ASTM International, NFPA, Brazilian National Standards Organization, SAGE Journals, ProQuest, JSTOR, Emerald, Scholastic, Macmillan Learning, Hodder & Stoughton, MDPI, PLOS (Public Library of Science), Cambridge Scholars Publishing, Google Scholar, Scopus (Elsevier), Web of Science (Clarivate), DOAJ, arXiv, bioRxiv, medRxiv, EBSCOHost)

Powered by IS Indexing Software © All Rights Reserved.