On Monday, 1 July 2013, Croatia - a country transformed in just two
decades from violent conflict to a stable democracy, capable of taking
on the obligations of EU membership - became the 28th Member State of
the European Union. On the eve of its accession, European Commission
President Barroso said, 'Croatia's accession to the European Union is a
historic event, which returns the country to its rightful place at the
heart of Europe.'
From an ICT infrastructure point of view, the country lags behind
other EU countries. Currently, only two thirds of households have
broadband internet access - below the average proportion in the rest of
the EU, which is around three-quarters. But, when it comes to
e-Government, Croatia performs quite well according to some measures:
use of e-Government services for education matches the EU average, and
the transparency of e-Government with regard to personal data is higher
than the average for the rest of Europe, as is the usability of online
government services by non-Croatians.
Croatian ICT research
Croatia has already been a participant in European research
programmes for some time - taking part in 447 projects in total. This
has grown from just 29 projects in the Fifth Framework Programme (FP5)
to 130 in FP6 and now 256 in the Seventh Framework Programme (FP7).
Croatian organisations are partners in 25 of the ICT projects funded
under FP7.
In particular, the University of Zagreb has participated in around
40 % of the Framework Programme projects won with Croatian partners.
Founded in 1669, it is the oldest and largest university in
South-Eastern Europe and contributes over 50 % of the country's total
research output. When it comes to ICT, the Faculty of Electrical
Engineering and Computing accounts for around a fifth of the Framework
Programme projects contracted by the university, many of which are truly
remarkable.
Flying robots
Herding bees, or using robot 'sheepdogs' to control fish, may sound
like fanciful ideas, but this is what a team from the LARICS lab of the
University of Zagreb is working on currently, with encouraging results.
In the nature, swarms of bees and shoals of fish often coordinate
their movements through a simple set of rules, each individual taking
their cues from their neighbour to produce complex, coordinated
patterns. Researchers have already had significant success in
understanding and reproducing those rules and behaviours, but the
ASSISI_BF (1) project, launched in February 2013, is taking things to a whole new level.
Led by the Artificial Life Lab in Graz, Austria, the project team
aim to develop robots that not only 'learn' the social language of
swarming or flocking animals, but can influence the collective
behaviours of such groups. Eventually, the researchers hope to establish
a hybrid self-organising society from a mix of robots and animals.
Human operators would then be able to set goals for these communities,
leading to applications in sustainable agriculture and livestock
management.
A team from the project's Croatian partner, the University of
Zagreb, is developing the hardware and software for a 'Honey-bee
interaction arena' - a real-time, adaptive 'interpreter' for the
language of bees. The researchers then aim to use this tool to
communicate with bees and explore the features that make honey-bee
societies so robust and efficient, so as to adapt such features for use
in their hybrid robot/bee systems.
The LARICS research laboratory is also involved in the
EC-SAFEMOBIL
(2) project - devoted to the development of accurate motion estimation
and control methods and technologies for unmanned vehicles.
'Unmanned aerial vehicles' (UAVs), commonly known as ′drones′, can
get a bad press. But combined with autonomous systems they can play an
important role in applications such as disaster management.
Where rescue or relief missions are impossible or high risk for
human pilots, autonomous robot helicopters could step in to help or
replace them - but these systems need to be reliable and able to
position themselves accurately. The aim of the project is to develop
abilities such as landing on mobile platforms (e.g. ship decks) and
advanced cooperation, coordination and traffic control so they could be
used for automation of industrial warehousing or transport.
LARICS expertise in robotics, intelligent control, flexible
manufacturing systems and UAVs is contributing to developing
'Simultaneous localisation and mapping' (SLAM) using on-board sensors,
dynamic routing and distributed autonomous warehousing traffic
management. So it may not be long before robot drones can help
coordinate disaster relief or manage the warehousing and transport of
goods.
Intelligent infrastructures
The university is also involved in projects to improve our
communications, water supply and traffic infrastructures. The
communications project 'Network of the Future' will rely on new
technologies and architectures and, above all, on high-speed optical
network infrastructure. Europe's lead in the field of optical networks
could be lost if we return to an uncoordinated and scattered approach.
The
BONE (3) project therefore
set out to stimulate collaboration, an exchange of researchers, and
integration of activities and know-how by establishing Virtual Centres
of Excellence and reaching out to national research programmes, both
inside and outside Europe. In particular, the University of Zagreb's
Department of Telecommunications at the Faculty of Electrical
Engineering and Computing organised and taught courses based on a
Master's programme in 'optical communications and networks', building on
the work of the E-PHOTON/ONE Network of Excellence funded under FP6.
The Faculty's Advanced Control Team has also contributed to the
URBANWATER
(4) project, which is developing an innovative ICT-based platform for
efficient and integrated management of urban water resources and
infrastructures.
Just 1 % of the Earth's surface water is liquid freshwater - the
rest being salt water or ice. Demand has doubled in the last 70 years
and is expected to increase by another 25 % in the next two decades.
With urban areas accounting for 17 % of freshwater consumption in the
EU, city water supplies are clearly an important piece of the puzzle.
The University of Zagreb's Faculty of Electrical Engineering and
Computing had already helped modernise the Zagreb city water supply
system in the early 2000s and is now using its expertise in wind farms
and smart grids in the project. The aim is to build a platform that can
incorporate weather prediction, data on surface-water reserves and
household consumption and information on pressure and leakages.
Combining advanced metering, real-time consumption data and
demand-forecasting capability, adaptive pricing and user feedback, the
system could even be interoperable with energy infrastructure management
platforms.
Intelligent, sustainable transport
When it comes to updating transport infrastructure, 'Intelligent
Transport Systems' (ITSs) are key. The Department of ITS at the
University's Faculty of Traffic and Transport Sciences carries out
research into architectures, technologies, services and tools for
advanced traffic and transportation management. The Department is a
partner in the
ICSI (5) project's efforts to build a new ITS architecture that is less centralised than its predecessors.
Currently, architectures based on centralised control tend to have
problems with updates to the transport infrastructure, such as increases
in network size or amount of traffic. In the new, more flexible
solution, intelligence for sensing and actuation will be distributed
across the system, using local storage and computation capabilities to
host a software platform that runs ITS applications. Communication with
the control centre is only needed to update it with aggregated data from
long-term operations, such as data mining, or for downloading software
upgrades.
The
ROADIDEA (6) project also
looked into the innovation potential of the European ITS sector to
reveal existing problems and bottlenecks for data utilisation and
service build-up. The project team, which included the Croatian partner
Meteo-Info, also tried to develop better methods and models to be
utilised in different ITS service platforms.
Results from the project include innovation methodologies to help
Europe make the most of its transport services, an 'Innovation Wiki'
document library and pilot schemes that include a study of a statistical
forecast model for road surface friction.
Meanwhile, the
MOBINCITY (7)
project aims to optimise the range and energy efficiency of 'fully
electric vehicles' (FEVs) through an integrated ICT system which uses
information from drivers, vehicles and transport or energy
infrastructures to provide trip planning and routing that optimises
energy charging and discharging opportunities.
Urban transport is responsible for about a quarter of transport CO2
emissions, so FEVs for public and private transport in our cities can
contribute significantly to the lowering of the current pollution
levels. The MOBINCITY team, which involves the Croatian Energy Institute
'Hrvoje Požar' (EIHP), is developing a system to supply vehicles with
information on factors that could influence their performance - traffic,
weather and road conditions, energy grid, etc. The vehicles will then
use these to provide drivers with optimum route and charging strategies,
increasing their practical range.
From e-Health to 'the cloud'
Croatia also has an active private sector involved in FP7 ICT
research - especially in software systems. With 60 years' history behind
them, Ericsson Nikola Tesla (ENT) is a Croatian provider of
telecommunications products, solutions and services employing more than
1600 people.
The company's e-Health Systems Department develops and maintains
large-scale and personalised health-care information systems, and is an
active partner in the
UNIVERSAAL
(8) project. The team hopes to make it easier for the ICT industry in
Europe to develop and deploy Ambient Assisted Living (AAL) solutions -
software and hardware that improves quality of life for older citizens.
Elderly people often need help to maintain their independence,
autonomy and even their health. As the European population ages, more
and more citizens will require more of this type of support. AAL
technologies use ICT to provide a solution. AAL applications aim to
extend the time people can live in their preferred environment by
increasing their autonomy and mobility. They also aim to enhance
security, prevent social isolation and promote better and healthier
lifestyles.
The project is developing an open, standardised platform and
specification that should help AAL service providers build their
services more quickly and cheaply. The team also aims to produce
software tools that further decrease development costs and expand the
AAL market by providing an application store, called uStore, through
which developers, service providers and end-users will be able to offer
and obtain AAL applications.
ENT is involved in the
CLOUDSCALE
(9) project, too, which aims to support cloud-computing customers in
designing scalable and cost-efficient applications. CLOUDSCALE is
developing tools and methods that detect scalability problems by
analysing code and this will support Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) and
Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) providers in designing their software for
scalability, as well as trouble-shooting scalability problems in
existing applications. The ENT team is primarily responsible for
requirements collection, use-case preparation and results validation.
Beyond boundaries
Croatia is also active in projects that promote regional or
transnational research cooperation - especially in the Western Balkans
regions, through such projects as 'Boosting EU-Western Balkan countries
research collaboration in the monitoring and control area' (
BALCON) and 'Western Balkan countries Inco-Net support in the field of ICT' (
WINS-ICT).
Croatian organisations form a vital link in international research
networks and grids too, such as the 'Multi-gigabit European research and
education network and associated services' (
GN3)
project or the 'International cooperative action on grid computing and
biomedical informatics between the European Union, Latin America, the
Western Balkans and North Africa' (
ACTION-GRID).
With an established track record, prospects seem good for Croatia to
continue to grow as a regional leader and active contributor to EU
research efforts in ICT.
The projects featured in this article have all been supported by the
European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7) for research:
(1) 'Animal and robot societies self-organise and integrate by social interaction'
(2) 'Estimation and control for safe wireless high mobility cooperative industrial systems'
(3) 'Building the future optical network in Europe: the E-PHOTON/ONE network'
(4) 'Intelligent urban water management system'
(5) 'Intelligent cooperative sensing for improved traffic efficiency'
(6) 'Road map for radical innovations in European transport services'
(7) 'Smart mobility in smart city'
(8) 'Universal open platform and reference specification for Ambient Assisted Living'
(9) 'Scalability management for cloud computing'.
Link to project on CORDIS:
-
FP7 on CORDIS-
ASSISI_BF project factsheet on CORDIS-
EC-SAFEMOBIL project factsheet on CORDIS-
BONE project factsheet on CORDIS-
URBANWATER project factsheet on CORDIS-
ICSI project factsheet on CORDIS-
ROADIDEA project factsheet on CORDIS-
MOBINCITY project factsheet on CORDIS-
UNIVERSAAL project factsheet on CORDIS-
CLOUDSCALE project factsheet on CORDIS
Link to projects' website:
-
'Animal and robot societies self-organise and integrate by social interaction' website-
'Estimation and control for safe wireless high mobility cooperative industrial systems' website-
'Building the future optical network in Europe: the E-PHOTON/ONE network' website-
'Intelligent urban water management system' website-
'Intelligent cooperative sensing for improved traffic efficiency' website-
'Road map for radical innovations in European transport services' website-
'Smart mobility in smart city' project website-
'Universal open platform and reference specification for Ambient Assisted Living' website-
'Scalability management for cloud computing' project website
Link to related videos:
-
EC-SAFEMOBIL project videos
Other links:
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European Commission’s Digital Agenda website