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CCAI9009 Artificial Intelligence

  • Writer: GEOG HKU
    GEOG HKU
  • 6 hours ago
  • 1 min read

Lecturer: Professor P.J. Adler


Course Description

In the near future, artificial general intelligence will likely combine with vast networks of sensors and robotics to create urban systems that don’t just respond to us but  think and act on their own. This course explores how such technologies are already beginning to reshape cities, and how we might understand the “future city” not as a sudden transformation, but as something that arrives gradually, in waves. Using tools from history, geography, and urban theory, we examine how cities change through both technological innovation and social response. We also explore how these changes happen unevenly across space and time — so unevenly, in fact, that traveling between cities can sometimes feel like traveling through time. 


The course begins with a short history of how technology spreads through urban systems. It then investigates how artificial intelligence is likely to transform employment in cities— which jobs might disappear, which ones might emerge, and how cities will be affected differently. From there, we turn to the built environment and explore how truly ‘smart’ infrastructure might change our ability to live, move, and interact with urban space. These changes might make the city cleaner and more livable, or more mechanistic and severe, depending on who you ask. Finally, the course considers how platforms, social media, and digital entertainment have reshaped how we connect with one another in the city and how we play. Throughout the course, students are encouraged to think boldly and to experiment outside of their home discipline. Assignments invite them to blend disciplines, build forecasts, and communicate compelling visions of today and tomorrow’s future city.

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