Think about your nose. Now think about big data. You probably didn’t realize it, but your nose is a big data machine. Humans are able to potentially discriminate more than thousands different odors.

On one hand, we have our big data nose; on the other hand, we have city officials and urban planners who deal only with the management of less than ten bad odors out of a trillion. Why this negative and oversimplified perspective?

Smell is simply hard to measure.

SmellyMaps have recently proposed a new way of capturing the entire urban smellscape from social media data (i.e., tags on Flickr pictures or tweets).

Cities are victims of a discipline’s negative perspective, only bad odors have been considered. The SmellyMaps project aims at disrupting this negative view and, as a consequence, being able to celebrate the complex smells of our cities.

For more information, visit the project page.

Publications

Daniele Quercia, Rossano Schifanella, Luca Maria Aiello, Kate McLean
Smelly Maps: The Digital Life of Urban Smellscapes
In Proc. of the 9th International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media (ICWSM), 2015

Team

Daniele Quercia

Daniele Quercia

@dquercia