The world is urbanizing at an unprecedented rate, and its cities are transformed by technology and distributed computing. With every photograph, Twitter post, public transit ride, and credit card swipe, we leave digital traces in physical space. The enormous quantity of information, or Urban Big Data, that humanity generates each day is beginning to off er new possibilities for research, design, and systems optimization on the city scale, but the first step toward our urban future is finding new ways of understanding and visualizing Big Data—revealing invisible dimensions of the city.
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Ivi Daskalaki and Nadina Leivaditi
languages) engaged themselves in multilingual research processes throughout all stages of the project, ranging from research design to implementation and the interpretation of data. The researchers remained committed to the principles of being open, clear
Agnieszka Radziwinowiczówna
the US for between six and twenty-five years. A longitudinal research design made possible the study of life-course changes and evolving migration aspirations and abilities. I have researched the impact of deportation on the community of San Ángel