The HARMONY project supports and enables several metropolitan areas to lead a sustainable transition to a low-carbon new mobility era. For city logistics, innovative services and developments can serve as promising solutions to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and energy consumption in metropolitan areas. The focus of this paper is on the importance of co-creation to achieve the desired reduction in emissions, including both engagement activities and (small scale) demonstrations. The constant and simultaneous involvement of cities, service and technology providers, research entities but also the civil society, is crucial for identifying success factors and lessons learnt.
MULTIFILE
This article is based on five years of longitudinal participatory action research on how former pre‐bachelor programme students with a refugee background experience finding their way into Dutch higher education and society. The four‐member research team and authors (two of which were former refugees), found that refugee students face a significant barrier of “us‐versus‐them,” especially in an educational context. We explored how creative co‐creation contributed to rethinking difference and sameness in higher education by breaking through or transcending this divide. Creative co‐creation through play, storytelling, or constructing artefacts enables “alterity,” approaching the other from the other’s position. Movement and action help to shape the world around us: Connecting and shifting positions creates sameness while leaving space for difference. Creative co‐creation during our research process included making co‐creation artefacts and activities, thus involving outreach to broader audiences for engagement. In the research process, it became clear that successful participation matters to all students and provides more opportunities for all, not just refugee students. A new notion of “we” in Dutch higher education and society that does not perpetuate the divide between “us” and “them” requires a shared responsibility. Higher education needs the university authorities and the teachers to make room for student stories and should provide spaces for dialogue and community development.
LINK
Active participation of stakeholders in health research practice is important to generate societal impact of outcomes, as innovations will more likely be implemented and disseminated in clinical practice. To foster a co-creative process, numerous frameworks and tools are available. As they originate from different professions, it is not evident that health researchers are aware of these tools, or able to select and use them in a meaningful way. This article describes the bottom-up development process of a compass and presents the final outcome. This Co-creation Impact Compass combines a well-known business model with tools from design thinking that promote active participation by all relevant stakeholders. It aims to support healthcare researchers to select helpful and valid co-creation tools for the right purpose and at the right moment. Using the Co-creation Impact Compass might increase the researchers’ understanding of the value of co-creation, and it provides help to engage stakeholders in all phases of a research project.
Co-creatie is steeds vaker de gebruikte aanpak bij het ontwikkelen van innovatieve diensten en producten in de zorg, waarbij beoogd wordt om het spanningsveld tussen stijgende zorgvraag en afnemend zorgaanbod te verminderen, zoals bij het proces van extramuralisering . Deze diensten en producten worden ontworpen door zorginnovatoren via co-creatietools en -methoden. Co-creatie bestaat niet alleen uit het betrekken van relevante stakeholders in het ontwerpproces via creatieve methoden, maar ook uit het beschouwen van specifieke omgevingselementen (zowel sociaal als fysiek) en het continu oog hebben voor de complexe zorgprocessen waar de innovaties in ingebed moeten worden. Hoe dit precies moet, is bij zorginnovatoren vaak onbekend. Juist in de extramuralisering van de zorg is innoveren vanuit een systemisch perspectief essentieel aangezien er dan juist grote (vaak onvoorspelbare) veranderingen in omgeving en processen zullen gaan optreden, zoals geïdentificeerd in het concept onderzoeks- en innovatieprogramma Co-Creating Health, van de topsectoren Life Sciences & Health en Creatieve Industrie. Doel is om in een kleinschalig project van vijf maanden de basis te leggen voor een systemische ontwerptoolkit voor extramuralisering in de zorg, waarvoor bestaande kennis uit eerdere zorginnovatieprojecten wordt geïntegreerd. In een vervolgproject kan e.e.a. opgeschaald worden naar zorgcontexten in bredere zin (en/of preventie) Op basis van een systematische review van uitgevoerde co-creatie in de zorgprojecten (feb en maart ’18), aangevuld met literatuuronderzoek m.b.t. procesanalyse en systemische methoden wordt een lijst van “werkzame toolkitelementen” geformuleerd die wordt gevalideerd door experts werkzaam bij ontwerpbureaus voor de zorg (april en mei ’18). Tot slot wordt een aantal conceptrichtingen m.b.t. vorm (al dan niet digitaal) en inhoud (bijv. kaartenset, mock-uproom of game) ontwikkeld (juni ‘18) en wordt op een vervolgonderzoeksaanvraag (bijvoorbeeld voor SIA) geanticipeerd om de toolkit(s) daadwerkelijk te kunnen gaan maken.
One of the mission-driven innovation policies of the Netherlands is energy transition which sets, among others, the challenge for a carbon-neutral built environment in 2050. Around 41% of Dutch houses do not yet have a registered energy label, and approximately 31% of the registered houses have label C or lower. This calls for action within the housing renovation industry. Bound to the 70 percent rule, a renovation plan requires full (or at least 70 percent) agreement on the renovation between relevant parties, including residents. In practice, agreement indicators focus mostly on economic and energy aspects. When indicators include people’s needs and preferences, it is expected to speed participation and agreement, increasing residents’ satisfaction and enhances the trust in public institutions. Tsavo was founded in 2015 to organise the sustainability of buildings for ambitious clients. Its sustainability process aims to accelerate renovation by keeping at their core value the social needs and preferences of residents. In this project Tsavo and TU Delft work together to optimise the sustainability process so, it includes everyone’s input and results in a sustainability plan that represents everyone. Tsavo’s role will be key in keeping the balance between both a sustainable renovation service that is cheaper and fast yet also attractive and with an impact on the quality of living. In this project, Tsavo’s sustainable renovation projects will be used to implement methods that focus on increasing participation and residents’ satisfaction. TU Delft will explore principles of attractive, accessible and representative activities to stimulate residents to decide on a renovation plan that is essential and meaningful to all.
-Chatbots are being used at an increasing rate, for instance, for simple Q&A conversations, flight reservations, online shopping and news aggregation. However, users expect to be served as effective and reliable as they were with human-based systems and are unforgiving once the system fails to understand them, engage them or show them human empathy. This problem is more prominent when the technology is used in domains such as health care, where empathy and the ability to give emotional support are most essential during interaction with the person. Empathy, however, is a unique human skill, and conversational agents such as chatbots cannot yet express empathy in nuanced ways to account for its complex nature and quality. This project focuses on designing emotionally supportive conversational agents within the mental health domain. We take a user-centered co-creation approach to focus on the mental health problems of sexual assault victims. This group is chosen specifically, because of the high rate of the sexual assault incidents and its lifetime destructive effects on the victim and the fact that although early intervention and treatment is necessary to prevent future mental health problems, these incidents largely go unreported due to the stigma attached to sexual assault. On the other hand, research shows that people feel more comfortable talking to chatbots about intimate topics since they feel no fear of judgment. We think an emotionally supportive and empathic chatbot specifically designed to encourage self-disclosure among sexual assault victims could help those who remain silent in fear of negative evaluation and empower them to process their experience better and take the necessary steps towards treatment early on.