Title: APPLICATION AND INTEGRATION OF INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS IN E NEIGHBOURHOOD
1APPLICATION AND INTEGRATION OF INTELLIGENT
SYSTEMS IN E- NEIGHBOURHOOD
- A. Kaklauskas, G.Kaklauskas, M. Krutinis,
- Vilnius Gediminas Technical University,
Sauletekio al. 11, LT-10223 Vilnius, Lithuania,
e-mail Arturas.Kaklauskas_at_st.vtu.lt
2Electronic Neighbourhood
- A neighbourhood (in British English) or
neighborhood (in American English) is a
geographically localised community located within
a larger city or suburb. The residents of a given
neighbourhood are called neighbours (or
neighbors), although this term may also be used
across much larger distances in rural areas.
Traditionally, a neighbourhood is small enough
that the neighbours are all able to know each
other. However in practice, neighbours may not
know one another very well at all. - Electronic neighbourhood is, in its simplest
form, the conduct of neighbourhood activities on
the Internet. Today the term is used rather
freely to describe any situation or solution that
has made the migration from real world to the
Internet.
3Electronic Neighbourhood (2)
- IT is not only some fancy new technology that
makes it possible to rationalise work. IT is now
the basis for societal development in the
so-called network society. Urban development in
the network society is based on two aspects of
the city the digital city and the physical city.
On one hand the digital city is taking over
functions that traditionally belonged to the
physical city. Several functions are being
carried out by means of information technology
without any kind of physical artefacts. On the
other hand IT is becoming part of the
infrastructure of the physical city in the form
of intelligent artefacts and architecture that
function as interfaces for digital information.
Similarly urban planning is experiencing a change
of paradigms in the form of new types of urban
regeneration and urban planning conventional
functional plans are being extended by extremely
complex, flexible models in which representative
democracy is combined with partnerships and
active participation and rational thinking is
combined with reflective thinking on the part of
all players in the city context. In this change
the involvement of users is intensified and the
professionals are given new roles, the result
being not only better physical solutions but also
a spin-off benefit in the form of new networks
between the various players who are essential in
the development of new solutions 5.
4E-Voice
- The project E-VOICE 15 intends to concentrate
on e-democracy/e-government in order to try and
renew the political information, communication
and interaction processes between elected
politicians, the administration and the citizens
including young people - on a local and/or
regional level at various locations in the North
Sea Region with the support of the 'new' media
(internet, e-mail, sms, i-mode, etc.) in
combination with the 'old' media (television,
radio, (mobile) telephone, newspapers, etc). Some
possible examples are 15 - the organisational development of digital office
hours citizens get the opportunity topose
questions to mayor, aldermen and/or council
members by e-mail or by direct communication via
the internet and web-tv - online townhall e.g. experimental broadcasts of
the yearly local-council budgetary meeting - digital debates and online panel discussions for
citizens - electronic neighbourhood groups.
5E-Kvarter
- The Electronic Neighbourhood project (the
e-kvarter) is part of major research into the
impact of information technology (IT) on urban
development and urban planning. IT is not only
some fancy new technology that makes it possible
to rationalise work. IT is now the basis for
societal development in the so-called network
society'. Urban development in the network
society is based on two aspects of the city the
digital city and the physical city. On one hand
the digital city is taking over functions that
traditionally belonged to the physical city. On
the other hand IT is becoming part of the
infrastructure of the physical city in the form
of intelligent' artefacts and architecture that
function as interfaces for digital information
9.
6Functions of E-Neighbourhood
- Electronic neighbourhood involve a lot of
functions. As example, the short description of
Home Monitoring, electronic version of the
Neighbourhood Watch and Intelligent home is
following. - BT Home Monitoring is a complete protection
system for home that alerts inhabitants to
potential emergencies - wherever they are.
Wireless sensors link to an Internet monitoring
service. This sends alerts via fixed line phone,
text message and email to inhabitants and a list
of nominated contacts if there is a threat to
home. BT Home Monitoring offers round the clock
protection for home and family. The following
advantages BT Home Monitoring is giving for
inhabitants 12 - Home protection - place sensors around your home
to detect intruders or the threat of fire (fire
detection requires smoke detectors - sold
separately). - Personal protection - panic alarm function allows
people inside your home to summon help in an
emergency. - Intruder deterrence - loud internal warning siren
deters potential intruders. - Simple to install - designed for easy
self-installation. No need for complex wiring,
all components pre-programmed for immediate use. - Real time response - alerts by fixed line phone,
text message or email tell you if your home is
under threat (call charges apply). - Control and assurance - build a network of
trusted friends and neighbours who'll also
receive alerts, an 'electronic neighbourhood
watch'. - Remote monitoring - see the status of your home
online any time, from anywhere. - Expands to fit any home - the starter kit suits a
small to medium sized home. Add up to 28 sensors
to suit your property.
7Functions of E-Neighbourhood (2)
- A new, electronic version of the Neighbourhood
Watch concept was praised by local authorities
and community safety groups around the country
for successfully tackling crime and the fear of
crime. The AlertBox, which is about the size of a
paperback book, uses a secure network of
state-of-the-art radio technology which allows
neighbours to contact each other instantly via
electronic messages. The whole community can be
warned of nuisance callers or suspicious persons
at the touch of a single button. The system also
allows neighbours to call each other in the event
of an emergency, such as fire or accident, while
they wait for the emergency services. The
system is already being trialled by a number of
local authorities, including the London Borough
of Barnet, as well as Rhondda Cynon Taf Community
Safety Partnership, which has provided AlertBoxes
for a local primary school, magistrates' courts
and a doctor's surgery. Neighbourhood Watch
itself - is not an alterative to the emergency
services but it does offer a valuable back-up and
peace of mind. Knowing that you just have to
press one button to alert your neighbours to a
nuisance caller or to call for help, is something
that vulnerable people, such as the elderly or
those who live alone, will really value 13.
8Web-based Expert and Decision Support Systems in
Neighbourhood Activities
- Expert systems today generally serve to relieve a
human professional of some of the difficult but
clearly formulated tasks. The expert systems
cultivated within cyberspace universes for
neighbourhood activities enable executives to
incorporate relevant best practices and
benchmarking applications into the daily
activities of the neighbourhood residents. The
description of a few experts systems is
following. - Developing a contaminated site can be costly and
time-consuming. There are literally hundreds of
decisions to take investigation and remediation
can be biological, chemical, geophysical or
hydrological, and new techniques are being
developed all the time. Norisc, a consortium of
European research groups, companies and
regulators, has made the process much easier by
creating a piece of expert system to guide the
user through this process. It draws on a huge
quantity of data including contamination profiles
from different industries, EU and US legislation,
and an inventory of techniques with their costs
and outcomes. Designed for use by regulators,
consultants and developers, the software supports
evaluation of a site, risk assessment and the
choice of remediation method. It has been tested
in four European cities, showing that it can
reduce the cost of redeveloping contaminated
sites by half, and the time taken to carry out a
risk assessment by up to 80 1.
9Web-based Expert and Decision Support Systems in
Neighbourhood Activities (2)
- OSCAR (Optimised Expert System for Conducting
Environmental Assessment of Urban Road Traffic)
is a European project 2 that addresses the
major problem of road traffic congestion and the
resulting air pollution in urban areas. The
quality of life of the citizen is expected to
diminish in several ways as a result of the
growth in urban traffic, including increased
journey times, deterioration in air quality and
health of vulnerable groups, and decreased
economic efficiency of industry and business. In
terms of air quality it is recognised that limit
values for NO2 and PM10 will be difficult to meet
in many European urban areas. Current
environmental assessment models, however, cannot
adequately address complex traffic situations and
micro-scale dispersion patterns observed in urban
streets 2. - TSG (Developing a Streetspace Reallocation Tool)
was funded under the EPSRC/DTLR FIT research
programme to examine the feasibility of
developing a design tool and expert system, that
will lead to higher quality and more innovative
streetscape designs. Aimed primarily at the
designer and decision maker, the tool would bring
together a number of functionalities (i) a
GIS-based design tool with CAD capabilities,
incorporating broad and detailed knowledge/data
relating to road casualties, land uses etc (ii)
a formal approach to the assessment and balancing
of street user needs (iii) a systematic approach
to streetspace reallocation (iv) detailed
information on elements of the street, and (v)
examples of good practice drawn from across
Europe. The study identified potential markets
for such a tool, with interest heightened as a
result of skill shortages, the recent sharp
increase in guidance and the need to take a more
comprehensive approach to street design issues.
10Expert System support in the Social Services
field
- Svensson 17 concludes the success of expert
system support in the social services field was
much helped by three factors - 1) The regulation, especially its volume,
complexity and completeness Svensson 17
foresees a trend towards computerizable
legislation also in other fields so as to make it
possible to roll out the practical successes of
expert systems also to these fields. - 2) The changing professional status of the
general assistance worker Svensson 17 believes
the expert systems have empowered a previously
deskilled group with declining status. - 3) An increased scrutiny and an increasingly
rigorous control structure, rendering
municipalities financially responsible for faulty
decisions. Svensson 17 clearly illustrate the
complex issue of introducing automated tools into
the administration. While reasons of economy,
equality before the law and openness can be
advanced to support the use, there are still a
number of issues that speak against it.
Especially notable is the shift from
theoretical/principal to pragmatic argumentation.
This means trust is an important issue. In the
Dutch social services, it seems trust in the ICT
tools at a certain point in time exceeded trust
in the manual system.
11Expert System support in the Social Services
field
- Svensson 17 concludes the success of expert
system support in the social services field was
much helped by three factors - 1) The regulation, especially its volume,
complexity and completeness Svensson 17
foresees a trend towards computerizable
legislation also in other fields so as to make it
possible to roll out the practical successes of
expert systems also to these fields. - 2) The changing professional status of the
general assistance worker Svensson 17 believes
the expert systems have empowered a previously
deskilled group with declining status. - 3) An increased scrutiny and an increasingly
rigorous control structure, rendering
municipalities financially responsible for faulty
decisions. Svensson 17 clearly illustrate the
complex issue of introducing automated tools into
the administration. While reasons of economy,
equality before the law and openness can be
advanced to support the use, there are still a
number of issues that speak against it.
Especially notable is the shift from
theoretical/principal to pragmatic argumentation.
This means trust is an important issue. In the
Dutch social services, it seems trust in the ICT
tools at a certain point in time exceeded trust
in the manual system.
12TRAde Control and Expert System
- TRACES (TRAde Control and Expert System) is the
first pan-European e-government application in
the field of food safety. It consists in a single
central database to track the movement of animals
and certain types of products. The new system
will benefit all authorities and economic
operators concerned by the animal trade by, among
other things 18 - Improving the amount and quality of information
as well as the exchange of information between
national and EU authorities in order to trace
animal movements. - Providing a system of electronic veterinary
certificates enabling trade operators to enter
the relevant information online. - ?Managing lists of establishments in non-EU
countries that are authorised to export products
of animal origin to the EU, while also managing
rejected consignments at EU borders. - ?Enabling improved controls on public and animal
health and on animal welfare. - ?Centralising risk assessments of potential
disease outbreaks.
13Model for teledemocracy
- The five elements of the Dutch "model for
teledemocracy" are described as follows 20 - STEP 1 INFORMATION. Starting point a concrete
proposal, probably by local or national
government, about a certain topic, like building
a new highway or cutting down a forest or
whatever. Plus independent background information
on this topic, including pro's and con's as
uttered by all parties involved, like governments
and action groups and individual citizens. For
this part of the information, the editors are
responsible. They provide also links to all
existing sources of information available on the
Internet on the topic, being supplied by the
parties involved. For the content of these
sources, the editors are not responsible. The
objective editorial information should be
provided by independent information-brokers.
People like university-professors, judges or
journalists. This could even be a new profession,
the "referendarists", people not being tied to
government or to commerce and analyzing local and
regional problems and their possible solutions.
They would formulate the referendum questions and
construct the voting options. - STEP 2 DEBATING. Mailing lists and news groups
about the current topic. Everyone concerned can
join the debate. Possibility to bring up new
alternatives for the current proposal. Also -
possibility to bring up new topics for new
teledemo-debates/votings. Before a topic is
accepted, the one who proposed it must raise a
basic amount of people supporting the proposal,
in order to prevent a flood of voting-demands
that can not be handled.
14Model for teledemocracy (2)
- STEP 3 INDIVIDUAL VOTING-ADVICE. The current
topic is cut into several sub-questions or
sub-aspects by the editorial team, which the
voter answers off-line or on-line, stating his
view on the importance and ranking of these
sub-aspects. The answers are clustered by fuzzy
logic or expert system and turned into an
individual voting-advice, getting back on screen
on-line, consisting of detailed sentences, each
representing a cluster. Basically it is an
overview of voters' values on the subject. It is
his/her importance ranking of the underlying
issues at stake, like being more concerned about
preventing environmental damage or being more
concerned about cutting costs. Including an
advice as on how to vote regarding the proposal
at stake (which may be ignored of course). - STEP 4 COLLECTIVE VOTING-ADVICE. All individual
voting-advices of all voters are clustered into
graphics, showing how many and what kind of
people agree with or oppose the current topic and
why. For example a majority of voters in
age-group 35-45 years and zip-code 1000-1200 is
againt the proposal because they think
environment is going to be damaged in the current
proposal. This step is accomplished using
pseudo-identities from which the personal
information is stripped away, leaving only the
essential general data such as postal code and
age-group. This procedure allows for use in
governmental decison-making without violating
indivual privacy, that is, without revealing
individual voting behaviour. - STEP 5. VOTING. Voter is granted permission to
the Web-page, c.q. authenticated to vote on the
current topic, by his/her passport-data. The city
he lives in gives him a public key for
voting-rights. A permanent voting-key is made out
of this data, using the pseudo-identity idea
developed by DigiCash among others. This process
garantees that the the voting-system knows that
the voter is permitted to vote but that the
system does not know what the voter votes.
15Public Participation GIS and Web-based Community
Decision Support
- Public participation GIS and Web-based community
decision support is described in this section
from attitude of different worldwide known
researchers and practicians. - Kingston (Kingston, 2003) demonstrates the
potential for linking GIS-based spatial
microsimulation decision support systems (SDSS)
to Virtual Decision-Making Environments (VDMEs)
to allow local policy makers as well as the
general public to explore local policy problems
and become more involved in the public
participation processes. Kingston (Kingston,
2003) addresses some technical aspects of the
linkage of spatial microsimulation modelling
frameworks to VDMEs. It also deals with the wider
implications that such a linkage may have to
local governance procedures. It will therefore be
of interest to local government policy makers and
practitioners as well as to researchers
interested in the prospects of policy simulation
models for the enhancement of local democracy.
16MicroMaPPAS
- Kingston (Kingston, 2003) described MicroMaPPAS
(Micro-simulation Modelling and Predictive Policy
Analysis System), which is an SDSS under
development for Leeds City Council. The
innovative feature of this system is the use of
spatial microsimulation techniques for the
enhancement of local policy decision making.
Kingston (Kingston, 2003) presented examples of
how MicroMaPPAS can be used for the impact
assessment of local policies. It is shown how
policy makers can use the system to gain insights
on the socio-economic polarisation within the
city in order to make informed policy decisions.
The public that is involved in using this
system is primarily the officers of the local
council. Nevertheless, Kingston (Kingston, 2003)
also argues the case for the extension of the
system enabling local community groups to use the
tool as a mechanism for obtaining National and
European funding for community regeneration
projects. It also allows for public feedback to
elected officials on the design of policies to
ameliorate local socio-economic problems. In
particular, it is argued, given that MicroMaPPAS
is being developed in JAVA, that it can be put on
the Internet and linked to VDMEs. It is suggested
that systems such as MicroMaPPAS can be used to
inform the general public about the potential of
local policies and to enhance, in this way.
17Open Digital Administration
- Open Digital Administration is used for
consolidates information (about citizens,
companies, projects, regulations, procedures,
guidance etc. including a range of diverse
information e-mail, video and other data files),
consolidates solutions (a parent case handling
solution with optional specialised subsystems
(i.e. dealing with building permits, Geographical
Information Systems etc.)), consolidates user
interface and user access (implying one common
user interface for all general solutions) and
integrates administrative and knowledge processes
used both in the public and the private sector. - The idea behind this consolidation is to make one
basic system or set of principles, which suits
the needs of both employees, other authorities,
citizens, companies and organisations. The means
of user access will differ (normally Lotus Notes
or Internet browses), the authorisation for
information will differ (what am I allowed to
see) and the solutions will differ (case
handling, self-service, education etc.), but it
is based at the same kernel.
18The benefits of the Open Digital Administration
- For citizens, companies and networkers better,
cheaper and higher quality information self
service ("One-Stop-Shopping" most services as
seen from the users can be found in one place.
Electronic mail and forms gives far quicker means
of communication and the digital architecture
makes it possible to simplify the forms making
them easier and quicker to fill out. The dynamic
form guides the user through an optimal process
(best practice). Forms gives the user direct and
secure access to own cases by digital signature)
and new democratic means of expression (the
direct access, through e-mail, to the political
representatives will be already in place. In the
future it will be possible to establish
electronic debate forums where the citizens can
get in a dialogue with each other and the
politicians about specific subjects, for example
local area planning). - For administrations and citizens, companies and
networkers better real time overview for both
citizens, public and private users at the same
time (regulations, information about persons and
projects etc.) better case handling (deadlines,
work flow. Exactly because it will be possible to
send electronic documents from one case worker to
another and to build in automatic alarms, which
alerts the employee when a deadline is getting
near, the work process becomes easier and faster.
The simplified forms results in fewer errors and
hereby quicker processing) closer contact with
the citizen (electronic mail, forms and direct
access to own cases) better means of
education/reduction/lifelong learning through
flexible tele-education better overview of
bottlenecks and critical paths in the whole
administration (usually the goal is to link
together different forms from several
organisations. Today many applications to one
organisation demand support documents from one or
more third party organisation and therefore the
total service time is not only measured through
one application but a series of applications for
one and the same "citizen-case". The relationship
of those forms is deciding the total service time
for a citizens application for a service). - Above measures will lead to a number of important
changes in the relationship between citizen and
civil servants.
19Info-kiosks for e-Services
- The main concept behind the introduction of the
e-kiosk network is to offer essential e-public
and business services to customers in a highly
accessible and user-friendly way. Citizens will
be able to use the e-kiosk network for a whole
range of services, including taking care of
banking business, payment of electricity, water
bills, online bus reservation and ticketing,
registration of births and deaths, payment of
house tax and other fees/charges, sending and
reading e-mail, online shopping, sending SMS
messages to GSM/WAP phones worldwide and doing
business with government offices. With special
regard to the latter, the e-kiosk network also
will be able to include a reader for the
electronic identification card, making business
with government offices. In the furthers future
it is hoped that the e-kiosk network will also
have the facility for people to make travel
arrangements, including the printing out of
tickets upon payment. - The e-kiosk network also can provide local
services grouped into themes. These can be
related to local businesses, local service
providers, local and national government offices.
Use of the e-kiosk network can be mostly free of
charge, with only sending e-mail and surfing the
Web subject to any fees.
20Intelligent Transport Systems
- Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS) are capable
of opening up new ways of achieving sustainable
mobility in our communications and information
society. ITS include Travel and Traffic
Management Systems (pre-trip travel information,
route driver information, route guidance, ride
matching and reservation, traveller services
information, traffic control, incident
management, travel demand management, emissions
testing and mitigation), Public Transportation
Operations Systems (public transportation
management, route transit information,
personalised public transit, public travel
security), Electronic Payment Systems, Commercial
Vehicles Operations Systems (commercial vehicle
electronic clearance, automated roadside safety
inspection, onboard safety monitoring, commercial
vehicle administration process, hazardous
materials incident response, freight mobility),
Emergency Management Systems (emergency
notification and personal security, emergency
vehicle management), Advanced Vehicle Control and
Safety Systems (longitudinal collision avoidance,
lateral collision avoidance, intersection
collision avoidance, vision enhancement for
collision avoidance, safety readiness, pre-crash
restraint deployment), etc.
21Intelligent Transport Systems (2)
- ITS can contribute to reduce the number of
accidents, their severity, and the time taken for
the emergency services to provide rescue
response. The most significant applications
include speed management (warning, driver
feedback, control) and driver and vehicle
monitoring. Many applications will increase the
safety of vulnerable road users, particularly
children, elderly people, and the disabled. Some
examples include - Adaptive speed control.
- Incident detection and warning systems.
- Faster emergency response times.
- Camera systems for speed and traffic signal
enforcement. - Automatic traffic control for pedestrians and
cyclists. - Weather and microclimate monitoring.
- Anticollision system.
- Enhanced vision systems.
- Congestion is a major problem for all groups of
users is a major goal of ITS programs.
22Integration of e-Neighbourhood Intelligent and
Institutional Systems
- The knowledge systems would be more useful if it
drove decision support systems. Computational and
analytical models could be applied to the
information in the knowledge base so as to
support decision-making. Some modules could be
applied to the knowledge base so as to make
recommendations. Also decision support systems
can facilitate the analysis, retrieval, and
dissemination of explicit knowledge. This
explicit knowledge consists of all documents,
accounting records, and data stored in computer
memories. Explicit knowledge refers to codified
knowledge that is transmittable in formal,
systematic language and is easily transferred by
using Information Technology.
23Inteligent DSS and Expert DSS
- For example, the integrated expert and decision
support systems have been called intelligent DSS
(IDSS), knowledge-based management support
systems (KMMS), expert DSS (EDSS), expert support
systems (ESS) and knowledge-based DSS. Various
forms of this integration have been examined and
a variety of system architectures have been
proposed. Moreover, based on a broad
classification of current types of information
systems, Mentzas (1994) identified some of the
essential features for intelligent decision
making support. According to King (1990) the ES
component in earlier systems was used to develop
a domain specific knowledge base with the DSS
serving as an "information resource", providing
factual data and models for the analysis of the
problem at hand. Research attempts have enhanced
the role of the expert system component to an
intelligent frontend to the DSS. These two
dimensions generate four basic architectures,
named (somewhat arbitrarily as) "loosely coupled
systems", "merged subsystems", "intelligent
interfaces" and "expert command languages".
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