A Digital Tale of Two Cities—Observing the Dynamics of the Artificial Intelligence Ecosystems in Berlin and Sydney
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Analysis of Knowledge Bases
3.1.1. Emerging Knowledge: Publications
3.1.2. Realised Knowledge: Patents
3.1.3. Experimental Knowledge: Startups
3.2. Analysis of EE Policy Practices
3.2.1. Policy Documents
3.2.2. Interviews
4. Results
4.1. Knowledge Dynamics
4.2. Policy Practices Related to EE
4.2.1. Drivers of City Policies: The “Smart City” Agenda
4.2.2. Offering Resources for EE
5. Discussion
5.1. Implications for Theory
5.2. Implications for Practice
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Berlin | Germany | Sydney | Australia | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2012 | 2019 | 2011 | 2019 | 2012 | 2019 | 2011 | 2019 |
15/20 | 10/54 | 14/55 | 15/137 | 12/20 | 23/54 | 6/55 | 6/137 |
Field | Description | Value |
---|---|---|
WC | WoS Category | (Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence) |
Boolean AND | ||
CI | City | (Berlin) or (Sydney) |
Boolean AND | ||
CU | Country/Region | (Germany) or (Australia) |
Boolean AND | ||
DT | Document Type | (Article) “Reports of research on original works. Includes research papers, features, brief communications, case reports, technical notes, chronology, and full papers that were published in a journal and/or presented at a symposium or conference.” |
Further filters | ||
Timespan | 2000–2019 | |
Indexes | SCI-EXPANDED, SSCI, A&HCI, CPCI-S, CPCI-SSH, ESCI, CCR-EXPANDED |
Field | Description | Value |
---|---|---|
DP | Publication Date | 2000 to 2019 |
Boolean AND | ||
AAD | Applicant Address | Berlin/Sydney |
Boolean AND | ||
AADC | Applicant Address Country | DE/AU |
Boolean AND | ||
CPC | Cooperative Patent Classification | (A61B5/7264 OR A61B5/7267 OR A63F13/67 OR B23K31/006 OR B25J9/161 OR B29C2945/76979 OR B29C66/965 OR B60G2600/1876 OR B60G2600/1878 OR B60G2600/1879 OR B60W30/06 OR B60W30/10 OR B60W30/14 OR B62D15/0285 OR B64G2001/247 OR E21B2041/0028 OR F02D41/1405 OR F03D7/046 OR F05B2270/707 OR F05B2270/709 OR F05D2270/709 OR F16H2061/0081 OR F16H2061/0084 OR G01N2201/1296 OR G01N29/4481 OR G01N33/0034 OR G01R31/2846 OR G01R31/3651 OR G01S7/417 OR G05B13/027 OR G05B13/0275 OR G05B13/028 OR G05B13/0285 OR G05B13/029 OR G05B13/0295 OR G05B2219/33002 OR G05D1/00 OR G05D1/0088 OR G06F11/1476 OR G06F11/2257 OR G06F11/2263 OR G06F15/18 OR G06F17/16 OR G06F17/2282 OR G06F17/27 OR G06F17/28 OR G06F17/30029 OR G06F17/30247 OR G06F17/30401 OR G06F17/3043 OR G06F17/30522 OR G06F17/30654 OR G06F17/30663 OR G06F17/30666 OR G06F17/30669 OR G06F17/30672 OR G06F17/30684 OR G06F17/30687 OR G06F17/3069 OR G06F17/30702 OR G06F17/30705 OR G06F17/30731 OR G06F17/30743 OR G06F17/30784 OR G06F19/24 OR G06F19/707 OR G06F2207/4824 OR G06K7/1482 OR G06K9/00 OR G06N3/00 OR G06N3/004 OR G06N5/003 OR G06N7/005 OR G06N7/046 OR G06N99/005 OR G06T2207/20081 OR G06T2207/20084 OR G06T2207/20084 OR G06T2207/30236 OR G06T2207/30248 OR G06T3/4046 OR G06T9/002 OR G08B29/186 OR G10H2250/151 OR G10H2250/311 OR G10K2210/3024 OR G10K2210/3038 OR G10L15/00 OR G10L17/00 OR G10L25/30 OR G11B20/10518 OR H01J2237/30427 OR H01M8/04992 OR H02H1/0092 OR H02P21/0014 OR H02P23/0018 OR H03H2017/0208 OR H03H2222/04 OR H04L2012/5686 OR H04L2025/03464 OR H04L2025/03554 OR H04L25/0254 OR H04L25/03165 OR H04L41/16 OR H04L45/08 OR H04N21/4662 OR H04N21/4666 OR H04Q2213/054 OR H04Q2213/13343 OR H04Q2213/343 OR H04R25/507 OR Y10S128/924 OR Y10S128/925 OR Y10S706/00) |
Field | Operator | Value |
---|---|---|
Funding Status | includes any | “Seed,” “Early Stage Venture,” “Late Stage Venture” |
Industries | includes any | “Artificial Intelligence” |
Operating Status | equals | “Active” |
Founded Date | between | “2000” and “2019” |
Headquarters Location | includes any | “Berlin” or “Sydney” or “Germany” or “Australia” |
Berlin | ||
Focus Area | Document Title/Code | Reference |
EE | Startup Agenda/BD1 | [55] |
Digital Technology | Digital Economy in Berlin/BD2 | [56] |
Economic Development | Industrial City Berlin Masterplan 2018–2021/BD3 | [57] |
Sydney | ||
Focus Area | Document Title/Code | Reference |
EE | Tech Startups Action Plan/SD1 | [58] |
Digital Technology | Digital Strategy/SD2 | [59] |
Economic Development | Economic Development Strategy/SD3 | [60] |
Code | Role | Perspective | Organisation | Focus Area | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EE 1 | DT 2 | ED 3 | ||||
Berlin | ||||||
B1 | Manager | Urban Startup Affairs | City Government | x | x | |
B2 | Founder | Digital Policy Making | Think Tank | X | x | |
B3 | Speaker | Urban Digitalisation | Research Institution | x | X | x |
B4 | Founder and Director | Digital Society | Research Institution | x | X | |
Sydney | ||||||
S1 | Manager | Economic Programs | City Government | x | x | |
S2 | Deputy CEO | City Competitiveness | Think Tank | x | x | |
S3 | Director | Entrepreneurship | Research Institution | x | X | |
S4 | Executive Director | Innovation and Entrepreneurship | Research Institution | x | X | x |
Berlin | Germany | Ratio [%] | Sydney | Australia | Ratio [%] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Publications | 914 | 11,018 | 8.3 | 1914 | 8330 | 23.0 |
Patents | 20 | 1515 | 1.3 | 17 | 159 | 10.7 |
Startups | 70 | 148 | 47.3 | 29 | 68 | 42.6 |
Population 1 | 3,769,495 | 83,166,711 | 4.5 | 5,312,163 | 25,764,100 | 20.6 |
Berlin | Sydney | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Funding Body | # | % | Funding Body | # | % |
German Research Foundation (DFG) | 114 | 12.47 | National Natural Science Foundation of China | 434 | 22.68 |
Federal Ministry of Education Research (BMBF) | 47 | 5.14 | Australian Research Council | 426 | 22.26 |
European Union (EU) | 26 | 2.85 | National Basic Research Program of China | 84 | 4.39 |
National Natural Science Foundation of China | 26 | 2.85 | Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities | 78 | 4.08 |
Alexander von Humboldt Foundation | 24 | 2.63 | Australian Government | 51 | 2.67 |
Austrian Science Fund (FWF) | 14 | 1.53 | China Postdoctoral Science Foundation | 43 | 2.25 |
European Community (EC) | 14 | 1.53 | National Science Foundation (NSF) | 40 | 2.09 |
Foundation Arc pour la Recherche sur le Cancer | 35 | 1.83 | |||
China Scholarship Council | 30 | 1.57 | |||
Hong Kong Research Grants Council | 29 | 1.52 |
Aspect | Policy Document | Interview Statements |
---|---|---|
Smart city initiatives | We want Sydney to be a ‘smart city’—but smart cities are not smart just because of technology—they have smart governance and empowered communities sharing knowledge and intelligence about their city. (SD2) | The smart city initiative in Berlin is more bottom-up and organic. It is based on mobility technologies. (B1 and B4) The government supports the smart city initiative in order to support innovation, especially around waste management or energy efficiency. (S4) |
Government tasks | The main tasks are infrastructure (such as online city transactions), awareness, education, city communication, regulations. (SD3) (BD2) | The city government supports campus startups and hubs. (B1) Sydney government plays and has always played a significant role in developing the startup scene. The establishment of Sydney Startup Hub is an example. (S2) |
Connection of digital strategy with EE strategy | (No strong connection between digital and EE policies.) | A strong connection in urban policy between tech startup policy and digital development is seen as a success factor in both cities, but not achieved yet. (S2 and B1) |
Aspect | Policy Document | Interview Statements |
---|---|---|
Human capital | Berlin offers digital companies unique conditions that are not found anywhere else in the world: highly skilled professionals. (BD3) The city of Sydney has to ensure residents and businesses having the skills and infrastructure needed to participate fully in the digital world. (SD2) (SD3) | Human capital is a significant advantage for Berlin. It attracts talent because people feel well and the quality of life in the city leads to attract tech startups. (B2 and B3) Startups are pushed by the university sector in Sydney. (S2) |
Local knowledge spillovers | The connection between startups and industry is a strategic priority. (BD3) The action item for the government is effectively facilitating partnerships to maximise benefits. (SD2) | The lack of a corporate landscape in the city is a challenge. There are silos between academia and startups. (B2) A challenge in Sydney is the lack of corporate R&D and a focus on the sales market. (S4) |
Funding availability | Berlin is the European leader when it comes to VC investments. (BD2) Support technology entrepreneurs’ access to funding. (SD1) | The availability of grants or VC money is not a factor for people or come to Berlin. (B4) The availability of funding in Sydney is an attraction for startups. (S2) |
Data availability | A robust and comprehensive network in Berlin ensures seamless internet communication across all channels. (BD2) The government should control activities associated with city data collection, management, use, and release. (SD2) | By making city-related datasets available to startups, the city can play a huge role in their success. (B1) The city can act as a pilot customer for startup outputs. (B1) (S1) |
Quality of life | Berlin is a relatively young startup space, but now in line with NY, Tel Aviv, and London. The startup scene has become a deciding and image-building economic factor. (BD1) To attract talent and to nurture the talents of those who already live in our local area, we need well-managed urban environments with vibrant neighbourhoods, high-quality digital infrastructure, and precincts that attract clusters of talent to live and work. (SD2) | Berlin’s attractiveness and living conditions for young entrepreneurs seem to be its biggest draw card. Berlin is cool (tolerance, openness) and relatively cheap to live in. (B1 and B2) Sydney’s lifestyle is high but can be perceived as detrimental to startup culture. The city is also costly. (S1 and S2) |
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Lammers, T.; Cetindamar, D.; Borkert, M. A Digital Tale of Two Cities—Observing the Dynamics of the Artificial Intelligence Ecosystems in Berlin and Sydney. Sustainability 2021, 13, 10564. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131910564
Lammers T, Cetindamar D, Borkert M. A Digital Tale of Two Cities—Observing the Dynamics of the Artificial Intelligence Ecosystems in Berlin and Sydney. Sustainability. 2021; 13(19):10564. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131910564
Chicago/Turabian StyleLammers, Thorsten, Dilek Cetindamar, and Maren Borkert. 2021. "A Digital Tale of Two Cities—Observing the Dynamics of the Artificial Intelligence Ecosystems in Berlin and Sydney" Sustainability 13, no. 19: 10564. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131910564
APA StyleLammers, T., Cetindamar, D., & Borkert, M. (2021). A Digital Tale of Two Cities—Observing the Dynamics of the Artificial Intelligence Ecosystems in Berlin and Sydney. Sustainability, 13(19), 10564. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131910564