Socio-inspired ICT

Activity: Talk or presentationPoster presentationunknown

Description

Modern ICT (Information and Communication Technology) has developed a vision where the “computer” is no longer associated with the concept of a single device or a network of devices, but rather the entirety of situated services originating in a digital world, which are perceived through the physical world. It is observed that services with explicit user input and output are becoming to be replaced by a computing landscape sensing the physical world via a huge variety of sensors, and controlling it via a plethora of actuators. The nature and appearance of computing devices is changing to be hidden in the fabric of everyday life, invisibly networked, and omnipresent, with applica- tions greatly being based on the notions of context and knowledge. Interaction with such globe spanning, modern ICT systems will pre- sumably be more implicit, at the periphery of human attention, rather than explicit, i.e. at the focus of human attention. Socio-inspired ICT assumes that future, globe scale ICT systems should be viewed as social systems. Such a view challenges research to identify and formalize the principles of interaction and adaptation in social systems, so as to be able to ground future ICT systems on those principles. This position paper therefore is concerned with the intersection of social behaviour and modern ICT, creating or recreating social conventions and social contexts through the use of pervasive, globespanning, omnipresent and participative ICT.
Period13 Jun 2013
Event titleCHIST-ERA Conference
Event typeConference
LocationBelgiumShow on map

Fields of science

  • 202017 Embedded systems
  • 102019 Machine learning
  • 102009 Computer simulation
  • 102 Computer Sciences
  • 211912 Product design
  • 211902 Assistive technologies
  • 102020 Medical informatics
  • 102022 Software development
  • 102021 Pervasive computing
  • 102013 Human-computer interaction
  • 102025 Distributed systems

JKU Focus areas

  • Computation in Informatics and Mathematics
  • Engineering and Natural Sciences (in general)