Futurity

Listen: How ‘smart city’ sensors keep an eye on Chicago

In this podcast episode, hear how sensors that can monitor everything from air quality to traffic could help keep "smart cities" of the future healthier and safer.

Imagine a health monitor for the city, but rather than measuring heart rate or daily steps, this device measures everything from air quality to vehicle traffic.

The idea may sound like science fiction, but it’s becoming a reality for cities like Chicago through the Array of Things project, a collaborative effort among scientists, universities, local government, and community members to collect real-time data on the city.

Charlie Catlett, director of the Urban Center for Computation and Data at the University of Chicago and Argonne, leads the project based out of Argonne National Laboratory. Catlett is aiming to install 500 sensor nodes around Chicago and eventually setup a network around the world “to improve living and working in the city.”

“We talked to people in the city of Chicago to understand what their challenges are,” Catlett says. “And we found from talking with them and from our own work there’s a lot of data that’s missing, that should be able to be measured, and that requires data analytics, it requires data integration infrastructure, and it requires a measurement strategy.”

On this episode of the podcast Knowledge Applied, Carlett talks about sensor design, explains their sophisticated measuring capabilities, and discusses the future of “smart cities.”

You can subscribe to the podcast on iTunes and Stitcher.

Source: University of Chicago

The post Listen: How ‘smart city’ sensors keep an eye on Chicago appeared first on Futurity.

More from Futurity

Futurity3 min read
Young Heavy Drinkers Cut Alcohol Use During Pandemic
A new study finds heavy-drinking young adults decreased alcohol intake during the pandemic. The researchers found alcohol use and alcohol-related problems substantially decreased in heavy-drinking young adults during the pandemic, and these decreases
Futurity4 min read
Alzheimer’s Moves Faster In People With Down Syndrome
A new study shows that Alzheimer’s disease both starts earlier and moves faster in people with Down syndrome, The finding may have important implications for the treatment and care of this vulnerable group of patients. Nearly all adults with Down syn
Futurity5 min read
Why Saber Tooth Cats Kept Their Baby Teeth
Analysis suggests the baby teeth of saber tooth cats stayed in place for years to stabilize the growing permanent saber tooth, perhaps allowing adolescents to learn how to hunt without breaking them. The fearsome, saber-like teeth of Smilodon fatalis

Related Books & Audiobooks