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  <front>
    <journal-meta />
    <article-meta>
      <title-group>
        <article-title>Culturaturismo.piemonte: Coordinating Cultural and Touristic Operators via the Georeferenced Civic Social Network FirstLife</article-title>
      </title-group>
      <contrib-group>
        <contrib contrib-type="author">
          <string-name>Guido Boella</string-name>
          <email>gboella@unito.it</email>
          <xref ref-type="aff" rid="aff0">0</xref>
        </contrib>
        <contrib contrib-type="author">
          <string-name>Luigi Sanasi</string-name>
          <email>lsanasi@gmail.com</email>
          <xref ref-type="aff" rid="aff0">0</xref>
        </contrib>
        <contrib contrib-type="author">
          <string-name>Claudio Schifanella</string-name>
          <email>schi@di.unito.it</email>
          <xref ref-type="aff" rid="aff0">0</xref>
        </contrib>
        <contrib contrib-type="author">
          <string-name>Cristina Viano</string-name>
          <email>viano@di.unito.it</email>
          <xref ref-type="aff" rid="aff0">0</xref>
        </contrib>
        <aff id="aff0">
          <label>0</label>
          <institution>Department of Computer</institution>
          ,
          <addr-line>Science</addr-line>
          ,
          <institution>University of Turin</institution>
          ,
          <addr-line>Torino</addr-line>
          ,
          <country country="IT">Italy</country>
        </aff>
      </contrib-group>
      <pub-date>
        <year>2018</year>
      </pub-date>
      <volume>2091</volume>
      <abstract>
        <p>"FirstLife" is an innovative example of ICT and information visualization technology that can be used as a tool for the organization and co-production of CH related available information in a specific territory. FirstLife is a map-based civic social network that ofers a geo-referenced representation of open and crowdsourced data through an interactive map and that enable communities to collaborate in creating dynamic and public contents related to the area. It overcomes some of the major limits of social networks and web applications when they are used for sharing and generating contents related to a territorial community, representing the state of the art in crowdsourcing and showing information on interactive maps.</p>
      </abstract>
    </article-meta>
  </front>
  <body>
    <sec id="sec-1">
      <title>INTRODUCTION</title>
      <p>Much research on information visualization technologies for
Cultural Heritage (CH) is focused on users and on the fruition of content
going beyond physical museums, e.g., using virtual tours or taking
advantage of social networking technologies to put users in contact
with institutions and with each other. However, the same recent
technologies can be used for the advantage also of institutions
and cultural operators, who are facing increasing challenges in
coordinating the wealth of initiatives happening in their territories.</p>
      <p>This paper addresses the debate over the roles of ICT and
information visualization technologies to provide access to CH
collections, to support CH institutions and, at the same time, to reach a
wider audience, by introducing the civic social network “FirstLife”
as an innovative visual tool for the organization, co-production
and enjoy of the variety of CH related available information in a
specific territory.</p>
      <p>FirstLife is a platform intended as a shared virtual space for
coordination, cooperation and collaboration among public
administrations, local institutions, civic organizations, businesses and
citizens belonging to the same territorial area and sharing needs
and projects over it. A map interface provides an intuitive visual
way to create, visualize, share and follow geo-referred contents.
As such, it is being tested as a tool to enhance the management
and experience of cultural heritage on the side of both cultural
institutions and professionals and citizens.
2</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-2">
      <title>FIRSTLIFE: A CIVIC SOCIAL NETWORK</title>
      <p>
        FirstLife (http://www.firstlife.org/en) is a platform for Computer
Supported Cooperative Work, designed and developed by the Social
Computing team of the Department of Computer Science of the
University of Turin, which consists in a new map-based social
network capable of: to ofer a geo-referenced representation of
open and crowdsourced data through an interactive map; to be
focused on communities that share a territorial area of their interest
and collaborate in creating dynamic and public contents related to
the area; to exploit the potentialities of social networks to create
a virtual community and make it real at a local scale. FirstLife
aims at fostering co-production (in the sense of the Nobel Prize
Elinor Ostrom [
        <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref7">7</xref>
        ]) and Do It Yourself initiatives, providing a virtual
place connected via maps to the concrete reality. Thus, the platform
by itself is intended to involve the diferent actors in developing
new services and initiatives, from institutions to associations, from
citizens to enterprises.
      </p>
      <p>FirstLife can be used to visualize in an intuitive way, integrate,
share, comment urban territorial data and make them useful for
strengthening social and professional communities in the real world,
through virtual spaces for debating on strategic and operational
decision at diferent levels.</p>
      <p>FirstLife harvests the knowledge and the services that are now
scattered around many websites often unknown to the wide public
websites, focusing them on a local area. It reduces the
overloading of information by filtering them on a locality principle. There
are several projects with diferent purposes in which FirstLife is
currently involved, in Turin and elsewhere. Currently, FirstLife is
the technological infrastructure of two major European innovation
projects:
• WeGovNow is a H2020-EURO6-2015 research and
innovation project aimed to integrate in a platform technological
solutions for local governance, to extend the participation of
citizens and local stakeholders in decision-making processes
(http://wegovnow.eu);
• Co-City is an Urban Innovative Actions project aimed to
develop a model of local economy based and co management of
urban commons, to activate an inclusive urban regeneration
(http://www.uia-initiative.eu/en/uia-cities/turin).</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-3">
      <title>OVERCOMING THE STATE OF THE ART OF</title>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-4">
      <title>SOCIAL NETWORK AND OF WEB</title>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-5">
      <title>APPLICATIONS BASED ON A MAP</title>
      <p>FirstLife is characterized by typical map and social network features
• view posts and activities concerning the groups the user is
registered to;
• subscribe to objects/places on the map to receive
notifications on the bulletin board;
• view posts from people he/she is connected;
• perform queries by selecting the categories of information
he/she is interested in or by making searches with keywords.</p>
      <p>But it also overcomes some of the major limits of social network
and web application when they are used for sharing and generating
contents related to a territorial community.
3.1</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-6">
      <title>Beyond social networks</title>
      <p>
        Currently, both private and institutional actors are also using the
most common social networks to promote the public dimension of
their work [
        <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref4">4</xref>
        ] because those platforms ofer the opportunity to
disseminate information and engage people at a seemingly afordable
cost [
        <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref3">3</xref>
        ]. Indeed, sharing visions, decision processes, project results,
and activities is a need increasingly heard from public and private
actors. But the existing social networks have several limitations
[
        <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref10 ref6 ref9">6, 9, 10</xref>
        ]:
• a personalist logic centered on the individual and on his/her
private life;
• purposes other than support the coordination of diferent
players in the city for public goals;
• relationships based only on personal connections;
• a global perspective, not focused on the local scale which is
still the main scale where we live and act.
      </p>
      <p>
        The challenge is to design a digital platform to refactor the
current practices of cooperation between private and public sector
creating a shared virtual working environment to trace, plan,
collaborate and coordinate the initiatives of multiple stakeholders
acting in the city. Diferently from most mainstream social
networks, FirstLife targets is not the person as a private individual but
rather as a citizen who lives, works in and enjoys urban spaces
together with other people who share his/her interests and problems.
It evolved into a relational environment with social networking
functionalities such as group membership and notification, centered
on an interactive map of the territory. The selected area and
categories are the only filters for the content on the bulletin board. No
algorithm is used to recommend information, so as to avoid
enclosure in a filter bubble [
        <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref8">8</xref>
        ] and to increase serendipitous encounters
[
        <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref1">1</xref>
        ].
3.2
      </p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-7">
      <title>Beyond web applications using maps</title>
      <p>Starting from current limitations of web applications using maps,
FirstLife outlines an alternative approach based on building an
indexing system connecting scales and contents, on fixing
visualization and styling rules, and attributing an active role to the user
in defining goals, area of interest and related contents. It is built
upon a theoretical framework to develop map-based applications
where: contents are connected to the map entities and the user
interactions impact on the status of the map and of the application
status at the same time. Scaling and visualization theories about
traditional maps can be extended to digital maps in order to develop
web applications using maps as information management systems,
data viewer and recommender systems. Nowadays, the fast and
generalized spreading of digital maps, and the related production
of geo-localized social media, is due to the intuitiveness of maps in
representing reality.</p>
      <p>Nevertheless, apart from web geographical information systems
(Web GIS), spatial information in digital maps are not connected
with the map geometries, but just placed in their spatial context,
overlapped to an image.</p>
      <p>Current applications showing contents on a map cannot be
considered map-based applications since they do not exploit the map as
a knowledge management system, based on a visualization theory,
structured geographical entities and goal-related theming. FirstLife
represents the state of the art in crowdsourcing and showing
information on interactive maps, thanks to its vectorial maps showing
urban spaces as objects rather than cartographic images, and to
its ability to associate and cluster information at diferent scales
(building, block, superblock, district, etc.).
3.3</p>
      <p>
        The interface
3.3.1 Entities model. The platform allows the sharing,
representation and management of geo-referenced data (aggregated with
reference to the scale of interest), temporalized (explorable in
relation to the period of interest), crowd-sourced by diferent types of
users, referred to complex social entities corresponding to
markers on the map [
        <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref2 ref5">2, 5</xref>
        ]. The model of entities is organized into the
following five types:
• Places;
• Events;
• Work Groups linked to specific projects;
• News
• Extras such as stories and initiatives.
      </p>
      <p>3.3.2 Visualization, filtering and searching for contents. The main
FirstLife interface is composed of a map and a lateral wall,
containing summarized item cards. Single items can be opened clicking
on map markers or on their summarized card on the wall, this will
open a detailed view that shows their complete details (such as
categorization, description, linked URLs, etc.), their child entities,
the initiatives they are part of and the posts and comments about
them.</p>
      <p>The web interface has been conceived to ofer the user complete
control over what he wants to visualize on the map, with the
possibility to filter contents using: the main types of entities (Places,
Events, Groups, News or Extra in the standard model); the system
of categories and tags that users can choose to describe the entities;
the validity of entities in diferent time spans (thanks to a timeline
and a global calendar). The map itself represents a fifth filter that
acts on which entities are represented in the lateral wall. A search
bar allows to search either for an address, strings present in Entities’
names or for tag. The detailed card has a link to center the map on
something that has been reached in this way.</p>
      <p>Culturaturismo.piemonte
3.3.3 Adding content and social/collaborative features. Single
entities can be added to FirstLife via a stepwise wizard that guides the
user in adding the requested categories for the chosen entity type.
After this first mapping step, all other users can interact adding
their opinions in form of posts. Users can receive notifications
regarding new activities and entities they are interested by following
them.</p>
      <p>3.3.4 Geolocalization and areas. Entities in FirstLife are not only
referenced to a single point in space: adding something in the same
geographical coordinates but at diferent zoom levels of the map
will link it to diferent areas on the territory (single building or
road, whole block, neighborhoods, entire city, etc.). This adds a
further dimension to model reality, for example a cultural event
could take place in a single building, but a news could be of interest
for a whole cultural district.</p>
      <p>3.3.5 Clustering entities. Since markers on the map can become
too crowded, depending of the chosen zoom level, we decided to
join them in a single marker when they would be rendered too
close to each other. To keep the map expressiveness given by single
markers, that are diferent, in shape and color, for the five main
types of entities, these "clustered" markers are represented with a
pie chart showing the total number of entities clustered and the
relative abundance of their types via their colors
4</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-8">
      <title>FIRSTLIFE FOR THE MANAGEMENT AND</title>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-9">
      <title>EXPERIENCE OF CULTURAL HERITAGE</title>
      <p>The virtual space is structured by reflecting the organizational
logics and the need to share diferent programs and cultural and
tourist initiatives that are insistent on the regional territory. The
association of spatio-temporal data with semantic ontologies and
historical-artistic and cultural taxonomies, initiated with the
Initiative "FirstLife for Culture and Tourism in Piedmont", is being refined
thanks to experiments such as the one started in 2017 between the
Department of Computer Science and the Cultural Department of
Regione Piemonte, using as a case study the system of the
Piedmontese UNESCO recognitions, and building specific features required
by the new scenario.</p>
      <p>Thanks to the use of the platform by coordinators, cultural
workers and citizens, both internal management (at the level of single
territory and regional system) and interaction with the outside
(public and private subjects of the territory they belong to, citizens
users of the cultural tourism ofer of the sites) will benefit from the
sharing of management, design, promotional and public interest
information related to the territories concerned.</p>
      <p>In FirstLife, the cultural associations, as groups of people who
decide to co-organize activities and projects on their territory, can
tell the stories, share news about their activities, courses and
laboratories or look for collaborations and resources, create work groups
for the organization and management of events and initiatives in
collaboration with other cultural operators and local institutions.</p>
      <p>The local promotion consortiums, an integrated system of
territorial networks and themes for the protection and enhancement of
the historical, artistic and landscape heritage and of the productive
excellence of the piedmont region, integrate their networks and
initiatives starting from the places and groups and events active in
the territory in order to activate partnerships, collaborations and
joint projects aimed at expanding the development opportunities.</p>
      <p>Museums host stories of works and artists, of events linked to
exhibitions, permanent collections and educational activities, of
groups who work and live the museum producing culture. With
FirstLife, the museum connects to the places linked to the works
and the artists, opens up to the events on the territory and can make
synergy with the other initiatives developed within the museum
networks.</p>
      <p>Businesses for culture and tourism can meet in order to activate
new opportunities for developing services, products and projects
in their production sites; they can share the added value of their
activities through stories built in a participatory way with customers,
suppliers and collaborators; spread news in real time in their own
area and through their networks; they maximize the impact of the
events that are organized in the area by coordinating with other
local entities.</p>
      <p>Libraries can use FirstLife as a part of their cultural awareness
initiatives, entering into direct communication with each other,
receiving news about what happens in their network, coordinating
in order to promote events in the area, facilitating self-organized
groups of students, readers, scholars, local educators who live the
library and actively co-produce community spaces and services.</p>
    </sec>
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