Smart City 4.0 from the Perspective of Open Innovation

The purpose of a Smart City is to solve its inherent problems while simultaneously reducing its expenditure and improving its quality of life. Through the 4th Industrial Revolution technology, the advantages of Smart City are estimated to overcome the city’s expenses with city platformizat...

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Main Authors: Yeji Yun, Minhwa Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-11-01
Series:Journal of Open Innovation: Technology, Market and Complexity
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2199-8531/5/4/92
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spelling doaj-890ad97a44eb419896328423bf8f80f72020-11-25T02:35:02ZengMDPI AGJournal of Open Innovation: Technology, Market and Complexity2199-85312019-11-01549210.3390/joitmc5040092joitmc5040092Smart City 4.0 from the Perspective of Open InnovationYeji Yun0Minhwa Lee1Korea Creative Economy Research Network (KCERN), Seoul 06301, KoreaKorea Creative Economy Research Network (KCERN), Seoul 06301, KoreaThe purpose of a Smart City is to solve its inherent problems while simultaneously reducing its expenditure and improving its quality of life. Through the 4th Industrial Revolution technology, the advantages of Smart City are estimated to overcome the city’s expenses with city platformization. While a city traditionally is the subject of creation and not consumption, a Smart City currently is the key industry in generating more than 60% of its GDP in value creation from a production viewpoint. Moreover, with the expansion of online-offline convergence, cities can grow without limitation on its size, where connectivity and innovation determine the inclination of the city’s benefit-cost curve. As a city platform is responsible for connectivity, its value drastically increases through the 4th Industrial Revolution’s O2O (online to offline convergence) platform. When a city reflects on its own as a Digital Twin in the Cloud and when complete information becomes accessible through citizen’s participation through smartphones (Edge), Self-organization takes place, an ideal linkage between the city and citizens. Cities go through the self-organizing process of complex adaptive systems like the human brain. This research proposes a future model of a “Self-organizing City,” and suggests implementing the Smart City model based on the Smart City Tech-Socio Model in implementing strategies.https://www.mdpi.com/2199-8531/5/4/92smart citysmart city social modelsmart city technology modelself-organizing smart citysmart city strategy implementation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yeji Yun
Minhwa Lee
spellingShingle Yeji Yun
Minhwa Lee
Smart City 4.0 from the Perspective of Open Innovation
Journal of Open Innovation: Technology, Market and Complexity
smart city
smart city social model
smart city technology model
self-organizing smart city
smart city strategy implementation
author_facet Yeji Yun
Minhwa Lee
author_sort Yeji Yun
title Smart City 4.0 from the Perspective of Open Innovation
title_short Smart City 4.0 from the Perspective of Open Innovation
title_full Smart City 4.0 from the Perspective of Open Innovation
title_fullStr Smart City 4.0 from the Perspective of Open Innovation
title_full_unstemmed Smart City 4.0 from the Perspective of Open Innovation
title_sort smart city 4.0 from the perspective of open innovation
publisher MDPI AG
series Journal of Open Innovation: Technology, Market and Complexity
issn 2199-8531
publishDate 2019-11-01
description The purpose of a Smart City is to solve its inherent problems while simultaneously reducing its expenditure and improving its quality of life. Through the 4th Industrial Revolution technology, the advantages of Smart City are estimated to overcome the city’s expenses with city platformization. While a city traditionally is the subject of creation and not consumption, a Smart City currently is the key industry in generating more than 60% of its GDP in value creation from a production viewpoint. Moreover, with the expansion of online-offline convergence, cities can grow without limitation on its size, where connectivity and innovation determine the inclination of the city’s benefit-cost curve. As a city platform is responsible for connectivity, its value drastically increases through the 4th Industrial Revolution’s O2O (online to offline convergence) platform. When a city reflects on its own as a Digital Twin in the Cloud and when complete information becomes accessible through citizen’s participation through smartphones (Edge), Self-organization takes place, an ideal linkage between the city and citizens. Cities go through the self-organizing process of complex adaptive systems like the human brain. This research proposes a future model of a “Self-organizing City,” and suggests implementing the Smart City model based on the Smart City Tech-Socio Model in implementing strategies.
topic smart city
smart city social model
smart city technology model
self-organizing smart city
smart city strategy implementation
url https://www.mdpi.com/2199-8531/5/4/92
work_keys_str_mv AT yejiyun smartcity40fromtheperspectiveofopeninnovation
AT minhwalee smartcity40fromtheperspectiveofopeninnovation
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