[go: up one dir, main page]
More Web Proxy on the site http://driver.im/
Previous Issue
Volume 8, December
You seem to have javascript disabled. Please note that many of the page functionalities won't work as expected without javascript enabled.
 
 

Multimodal Technol. Interact., Volume 9, Issue 1 (January 2025) – 2 articles

  • Issues are regarded as officially published after their release is announced to the table of contents alert mailing list.
  • You may sign up for e-mail alerts to receive table of contents of newly released issues.
  • PDF is the official format for papers published in both, html and pdf forms. To view the papers in pdf format, click on the "PDF Full-text" link, and use the free Adobe Reader to open them.
Order results
Result details
Select all
Export citation of selected articles as:
26 pages, 380 KiB  
Review
How Architecture Builds Intelligence: Lessons from AI
by Nikos A. Salingaros
Multimodal Technol. Interact. 2025, 9(1), 2; https://doi.org/10.3390/mti9010002 - 27 Dec 2024
Viewed by 104
Abstract
The architecture in the title refers to physical buildings, spaces, and walls. Dominant architectural culture prefers minimalist environments that contradict the information setting needed for the infant brain to develop. Much of world architecture after World War II is therefore unsuitable for raising [...] Read more.
The architecture in the title refers to physical buildings, spaces, and walls. Dominant architectural culture prefers minimalist environments that contradict the information setting needed for the infant brain to develop. Much of world architecture after World War II is therefore unsuitable for raising children. Data collected by technological tools, including those that use AI for processing signals, indicate a basic misfit between cognition and design. Results from the way AI software works in general, together with mobile robotics and neuroscience, back up this conclusion. There exists a critical research gap: the systematic investigation of how the geometry of the built environment influences cognitive development and human neurophysiology. While previous studies have explored environmental effects on health (other than from pathogens and pollutants), they largely focus on factors such as acoustics, color, and light, neglecting the fundamental role of spatial geometry. Geometrical features in the ancestral setting shaped neural circuits that determine human cognition and intelligence. However, the contemporary built environment consisting of raw concrete, plate glass, and exposed steel sharply contrasts with natural geometries. Traditional and vernacular architectures are appropriate for life, whereas new buildings and urban spaces adapt to human biology and are better for raising children only if they follow living geometry, which represents natural patterns such as fractals and nested symmetries. This study provides a novel, evidence-based framework for adaptive and empathetic architectural design. Full article
36 pages, 16215 KiB  
Article
Smart City Products and Their Materials Assessment Using the Pentagon Framework
by Pedro Ponce, Mario Rojas, Juana Isabel Mendez, Brian Anthony, Russel Bradley and Aminah Robinson Fayek
Multimodal Technol. Interact. 2025, 9(1), 1; https://doi.org/10.3390/mti9010001 - 25 Dec 2024
Viewed by 56
Abstract
Smart cities are complex urban environments that rely on advanced technology and data analytics to enhance city services’ quality of life, sustainability, and efficiency. As these cities continue to evolve, there is a growing need for a structured framework to evaluate and integrate [...] Read more.
Smart cities are complex urban environments that rely on advanced technology and data analytics to enhance city services’ quality of life, sustainability, and efficiency. As these cities continue to evolve, there is a growing need for a structured framework to evaluate and integrate products that align with smart city objectives. This paper introduces the Pentagon Framework, a comprehensive evaluation method designed to ensure that products and their materials meet the specific needs of smart cities. The framework focuses on five key features—smart, sustainable, sensing, social, and safe—collectively called the Penta-S concept. These features provide a structured approach to categorizing and assessing products, ensuring alignment with the city’s goals for efficiency, sustainability, and user experience. The Smart City Pentagon Framework Analyzer is also presented, a dedicated web application that facilitates interaction with the framework. It allows product data input, provides feedback on alignment with the Penta-S features, and suggests personality traits based on the OCEAN model. Complementing the web application, the Smart City Penta-S Compliance Assistant API, developed through ChatGPT, offers a more profound, personalized evaluation of products, including the life cycle phase recommendations using the IPPMD model. This paper contributes to the development of smart city solutions by providing a flexible framework that can be applied to any product type, optimizing its life cycle, and ensuring compliance with the Pentagon Framework. This approach improves product integration and fosters user satisfaction by tailoring products and their materials to meet specific user preferences and needs within the smart city environment. The proposed framework emphasizes citizen-centric design and highlights its advantages over conventional evaluation methods, ultimately enhancing urban planning and smart city development. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

Figure 1
<p>Emerging technologies implemented in smart cities.</p>
Full article ">Figure 2
<p>The Pentagon graphic compares the evaluation of a specific case study against the ideal scenario.</p>
Full article ">Figure 3
<p>Penta-S evaluation exemplification: (<b>a</b>) The evaluated case (green polygon) and another case (red polygon) share the same centroid yet display different S-feature dimensions; (<b>b</b>) exemplification of another evaluated case that shares the same area with a different distribution.</p>
Full article ">Figure 4
<p>Penta-S technologies’ implementation in smart cities.</p>
Full article ">Figure 5
<p>Proposed topology of a smart city using smart citizens, smart communities, and smart cities.</p>
Full article ">Figure 6
<p>(<b>a</b>) Product development framework. (<b>b</b>) Life cycle phases of smart city technologies.</p>
Full article ">Figure 7
<p>Prototypes developed by Tecnologico de Monterrey for smart communities and smart cities.</p>
Full article ">Figure 8
<p>Developed solutions: (<b>a</b>) Solar umbrella for didactic purposes. (<b>b</b>) Bicycle with solar and regenerative charge modules. (<b>c</b>) Lego robot for teaching math at elementary school level. (<b>d</b>) Tomatoes’ recognition by using artificial vision for quality inspection.</p>
Full article ">Figure 9
<p>Penta-S features of rapid prototypes in the smart community.</p>
Full article ">Figure 10
<p>Penta-S features regarding the presented rapid prototypes in a smart city.</p>
Full article ">Figure 11
<p>Penta-S solutions for the smart community and their potential users based on the Big Five personality model. The gray marks highlight the personality traits that align with each product.</p>
Full article ">Figure 12
<p>Penta-S solutions for the smart city and their potential users based on the Big Five personality model. The gray marks highlight the personality traits that align with each product.</p>
Full article ">Figure 13
<p>Smart City Pentagon Framework Analyzer interface [<a href="#B52-mti-09-00001" class="html-bibr">52</a>]: (<b>a</b>) Product input fields. (<b>b</b>) Penta-S feedback, personality trait suggestion and a feature to improve the product.</p>
Full article ">Figure 14
<p>Smart City Penta-S Compliance Assistant API [<a href="#B53-mti-09-00001" class="html-bibr">53</a>].</p>
Full article ">Figure 15
<p>The table depicted from the API for the project <span class="html-italic">Adaptive Roof Shading</span>.</p>
Full article ">Figure 16
<p>Pentagon features’ radar chart for the Adaptive Roof Shading: (<b>a</b>) Initial assessment. (<b>b</b>) Updated assessment based on the API feedback.</p>
Full article ">Figure 17
<p>Circular economy challenges for S5 products.</p>
Full article ">Figure 18
<p>Characteristics for Penta-S materials.</p>
Full article ">
Previous Issue
Back to TopTop