Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14279/19291
Title: | Copernicus knowledge and innovation hubs | Authors: | Riedler, Barbara Lang, Stefan Christian Zeil, Peter Miguel-Lago, Mónica Schröder, Christoph Politi-Stergiou, Nefeli Vassiliki Kerschbaumer, M. Tramutoli, Valerio Tzouvaras, Marios |
Major Field of Science: | Engineering and Technology | Field Category: | Civil Engineering | Keywords: | Copernicus Academy;Copernicus services;CopHub.AC;Digital hubs;Innovation monitor;Knowledge landscape;Skills programme | Issue Date: | 6-Aug-2020 | Source: | International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences - ISPRS Archives, 2020, vol. 43, no. B5, pp. 35-42 | Volume: | 43 | Issue: | B5 | Start page: | 35 | End page: | 42 | Project: | ERATOSTHENES: Excellence Research Centre for Earth Surveillance and Space-Based Monitoring of the Environment | Journal: | International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences - ISPRS Archives | Abstract: | Copernicus, the European Space program ensures free data availability and the organisational and financial framework to provide standardized information products in its service domains atmosphere, marine, land monitoring, climate change, emergency management and human security. A key to success to the market uptake process is knowledge exchange among all actors from the various sectors involved, notably research and educational institutions, industry, and the public sector. As a successful instrument to foster and stimulate this exchange, maximize the impact and additionally boost related capacity building and training activities, the Copernicus Academy has been anchored in the European Space Strategy. The present paper highlights some key activities to leverage the potential of this dynamically growing network of experts from universities and research institutions, public and private organizations, companies, stakeholders, and increase the benefit to its members. The vision of establishing both physical implementations of regional Copernicus hubs and virtual Copernicus hubs, built on key elements of the European Innovation strategy, is discussed. Regional hubs, attached e.g. to centres of excellence, are essential to meet local needs for exchange and training to boost the user uptake. The increasing importance of virtual hubs is becoming evident as a critical means to maximise synergies among actors in the rapidly advancing technological areas. Proposed technical elements demonstrate innovative solutions to visualize and facilitate easy harvesting of the Copernicus Academy membeŕs expertise for different stakeholder and the public, and show cast possibilities of active involvement and exchange within the network. | URI: | https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14279/19291 | ISSN: | 16821750 | DOI: | 10.5194/isprs-archives-XLIII-B5-2020-35-2020 | Rights: | © Authors Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International |
Type: | Article | Affiliation : | University of Salzburg Spatial Services GmbH European Association of Remote Sensing Companies University of Malaga Evenflow Consulting University of Basilicata Cyprus University of Technology ERATOSTHENES Centre of Excellence |
Publication Type: | Peer Reviewed |
Appears in Collections: | Άρθρα/Articles |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
---|---|---|---|---|
isprs-archives-XLIII-B5-2020-35-2020.pdf | Fulltext | 1.65 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
CORE Recommender
SCOPUSTM
Citations
3
checked on Nov 6, 2023
Page view(s)
447
Last Week
1
1
Last month
3
3
checked on Nov 21, 2024
Download(s)
263
checked on Nov 21, 2024
Google ScholarTM
Check
Altmetric
This item is licensed under a Creative Commons License