The increasing penetration of modern information and communication technologies (ICT) in our daily lives is generating an unprecedented amount of digital traces of human behaviour. Thanks to recent advances in the collection, analysis and dissemination of large volumes of data, new user-centric data sources, such as smart phones, e-transactions, Internet social networks and smart card technologies, can be combined with more traditional demographic and economic databases to extract detailed information about people's activity and mobility. This information is potentially of great value for policy making in a variety of areas, including transport, urban planning, housing, energy, environment and ;
S'il vous plaît Se connecter pour voir cette section