Cityware: Design and Evaluation of City-scale Pervasive Technologies Tim Jay
Contents Background and Rationale Methodology Example studies and findings The context logger Perceptions of the environment: neighbourhood and city Bluefish: A privacy probe Discussion
Cityware Research collaboration between the University of Bath, Imperial College, The Bartlett at University College London, Vodafone, Nokia and Hewlett- Packard ( Aim: To increase our knowledge and understanding of peoples relationships with urban spaces and with pervasive technologies in order to enable the development of tools and techniques for the implementation of long-term, city-scale pervasive systems.
How do people understand the city? Lynch, 1960 – The Image of the City Imagability/legibility Basic elements – paths, edges, districts, nodes and landmarks Wayfinding and Navigation Landmarks Cognitive Maps Urban Semiotics
The relationship between pervasive technologies and urban environments Urbantapestries.net, Urban-atmospheres.net, MobileBristol.co.uk (all worth having a look at) Often cover relatively small physical areas Often run over short timescales Cityware aims to address the methodological challenge of longitudinal, city-scale studies
Some issues with traditional mobile and pervasive evaluation Bias towards laboratory testing Sample bias – technologically literate participants Relatively restricted in both time and space – often out of context
The Cityware Cohort 30 participants, working with us for the 3-year duration of the project Aged male, 10 female Variety of occupations and levels of technological ability/awareness All equipped with a Nokia Smartphone and Vodafone SIM Attend regular workshops + complete other activities
Data Collected Questionnaires, interviews & focus group work Personality data Map sketching Moblogging
Example Studies The context logger Perceptions of the environment – neighbourhood and city Bluefish: A privacy probe
The context logger Developed in the Computer Science department, Imperial College Designed to inform the development of context-aware applications and services Records a variety of data generated by a mobile phone Data is automatically transmitted to a remote server using the 3G/GPRS network
Context logged Time/date and sender/receiver of text messages Time/date and sender receiver of voice calls Camera images Applications in operation Location (using either Bluetooth GPS unit, or built-in functionality) Bluetooth scans Cell ID in use Active profile Battery strength
Context logger evaluation Iterative process Local group 3 cohort members (selection criteria) Full cohort Refinement of the application at each stage Functionality Interaction with general use of phone Privacy and trust concerns
Context Logger: Discussion Different issues arise at various points of iteration There is an association between the demographic of the sample and the level of concern that arises Some issues could only have been discovered through genuine use with genuine user group
Perceptions of the environment How do city residents and visitors perceive and use the city? Some background Space syntax methods used to predict pedestrian movements. These can be compared with: Bluetooth gate counts used in order to analyse actual movements of Bluetooth device around the city (+ social network analysis) These dont give access to some important aspects that we are interested in – what meanings are derived from, or ascribed to, the city?
Methods 3 phases Neighbourhoods City Real City Long-term study with cohort Multiple methods
Methods Moblogging tour Questionnaires Landmarks City use Map sketching Boundary marking
The Neighbourhood/City Moblogging Tour GPS trail Photos Video Text notes Audio notes Analysis focuses on: Representations across formats Landmarks Effects of moblogging on perception
Differences in representation
Landmarks Rural v. Urban Traditional v. Personal Traditional landmarks Churches, schools, war memorials, parks, pubs etc. Personal landmarks (and non-landmarks) Allotments down a back lane A derelict building
Effects of moblogging on perception Change in scale between 1 st and 2 nd sketch maps
Next steps Recently completed similar set of activities in the city centre Day-to-day city use Expand dataset – including digital landmarks, Bluetooth, Wifi
Bluefish Designed as a privacy probe Previous Cityware research has shown that many people are not aware that they are broadcasting information about themselves via their Bluetooth devices Consists of a network of Bluetooth scanners public display screens, in various locations across Bath The screens represent Bluetooth activity that has been recorded by the network of scanners - Example Example
Research Questions How do people respond to their data and history being made visible by the Bluefish system? How does behaviour change – e.g. Bluetooth turned on/off, opting in/out of the system What are peoples perceptions of the data, and what are the reasons for any behaviour change?
Methods System logs can be used to analyse changes in behaviour but dont give us the reasons Interviews on location can tell us something about peoples perception of the system and any reasons for changes in behaviour But – some of the more interesting data will not be accessible through interviews Initial work will be done with the cohort
Advantages of the cohort Broad demographic Trust and investment in the project Gives us access to participants who may have concerns over privacy/security/trust issues, or who are not engaged with the system
Summary Sustained engagement of participants Helps address the problem of validity Combinations of data Mixture of methods – lab + field, quantitative + qualitative Engagement of a community Participants have ownership of and commitment to the project