JB McCarthy from University College Cork (UCC) Ireland briefed Sean Sherlock, the Irish Minister for Research and Innovation about the latest news on FuturICT.
JB explained the extent of the engagement by Irish universities and how the research agenda for FuturICT aligns with the recent national research agenda strategy document as well as with Horizon 2020.
Friday, 21 September 2012
Tuesday, 11 September 2012
Positive Feedback from External Reviewers
We are delighted with the positive feedback on our Pilot Phase Project that we have received from the EC FP7 External Reviewers. They have given us lots of constructive feedback that we can build on within our full project proposal that we will submit in October. Their comments (below) on the potential impacts of the FuturICT project is very encouraging, we look forward to making this a reality.
"There is evidence that the project will have
considerable scientific, technical, commercial, social or environmental impact.
If the planned flagship project would be successful, there could be many
scientific and technological breakthroughs including the Living Earth
Simulator, the Planetary Nervous System, the Global Participatory Platform,
approaches to socio-inspired ICT and global system science, several
exploratories and observatories as well as guidelines for an ethical use of
ICT."
Labels:
Big data,
Big Science,
Data Science,
EC,
exploratories,
FET,
Flagship,
FP7,
FuturICT,
Global Participatory Platform,
GPP,
impact,
LES,
Living Earth Simulator,
Planetary Nervous System,
PNS,
www.futurict.eu
Monday, 10 September 2012
Dirk explains the Aims of FuturICT
Dirk Helbing, Scientific Coordinator of FuturICT explains the aims of FuturICT at a recent visit to SwissNex San Francisco earlier this summer.
Hi, I am Dirk Helbing, and I’m the scientific coordinator of
the FuturICT Project.
FuturICT is a project that wants to create new science and
technology to
promote a sustainable and resilient earth. So it’s about unleashing
actually, the power of information systems for the future.
I started off as a physicist and then I did transportation science
and now I’m a sociologist, but I am considering myself as a complexity scientist.
I am here in San Francisco where I am giving a talk at SwissNex. It was an extremely
exciting audience in one of the most innovative areas of the world actually, so
I was very much looking forward to this talk in order to get feedback. That feedback
was extremely positive and in particular there is also interest in teaming up actually
with our project, but also to see how we can bring science and art together.
We are now entering the age of Big Data, and at the same time,
an age of hyper-connectivity.
That creates huge new opportunities but also challenges. We need to understand how
this is going to change our society and economy.
Futurict will bring together data, models and people. It
will create open platforms for everybody, so called Data
and Model
Commons.
The plan of the project is not to connect as many data that
we can get, and to create a supercomputer that is going to rule the world and
take decisions for us. It’s more about creating new instruments that allow us to get a better, multi perspective
view of complex matters that we need to understand.
We are not planning to do a brute force data mining and machine
learning exercise, because it’s just a very small percentage of data that actually
matters, that is meaningful and that will have an impact on our future and
enter our history books.
If we understand conditions for instability but
also conditions for resilience and sustainability, and also how to respond
flexibly to changing conditions,
that will be extremely helpful.
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