Enabling a National Cyber-Physical Infrastructure to Catalyse Innovation
Overview
This consultation seeks to broaden the UK’s understanding of the impact and opportunities for cyber-physical systems and also advance our collective understanding of the value of, and options for an underpinning Cyber-Physical Infrastructure to unleash innovation.
Understanding and connecting complex systems has been key to every major human endeavour. As we face critical challenges such as reaching net zero and responding to global health crises, there is a need to understand, innovate and act in complex environments. Connected systems of digital and physical, or ‘cyber-physical’, technologies, such as digital twins and smart robotic systems, will be key to this.
This consultation presents a vision for Cyber-Physical Infrastructure in which connected networks of cyber-physical systems could provide a step change in the economic and social value of individual systems. Much like the internet, this would not be a single, centralised entity. Instead, ecosystems of connected systems would form upon which new products, services and business models could be built.
Why your views matter
This consultation seeks views on the value of and options for a Cyber-Physical Infrastructure and to identify the opportunities, challenges and possible priority areas for action within the following:
- People and Culture
- Technical Research, Development and Infrastructure
- Security and Resilience
- Connection and Interoperability
- Sustainable Markets
- Working Globally
This consultation is open to anyone with an interest in this area, in particular we would like to hear from:
- Industry (supply, demand and consumer)
- Academia
- Institutions
- Wider public sector
- Not-for-profit
Read the consultation document on GOV.UK.
Audiences
- Black and ethnic minority groups
- Businesses
- Central government
- Charities
- Charities and Third Sector organisations
- Charity or social enterprise
- Civil Society Organisations
- Construction
- Disability groups
- FE policy organisations
- Freelance researchers
- Further Education Colleges
- General public
- HE Journalists and press
- Higher Education institutions
- Individual
- Innovation community
- Investment
- Large businesses (over 250 staff)
- Learned Societies
- LGBT groups
- Local government
- Low carbon technologies
- Manufacturing
- Medium business (50 to 250 staff)
- Micro business (up to 9 staff)
- Multinational businesses
- National Academies
- Non-departmental public bodies
- Non-Government Organisations
- Older people
- Research Councils
- Research Funders
- Researchers
- Retail
- Science journalists
- Science Policy organisations and thinktanks
- Scientists
- Small business (10 to 49 staff)
- SMEs (small and medium businesses)
- Technology (R&D)
- The Devolved Administrations
- Thinktanks
- Universities
- Universities
- University associations
- Younger people
Interests
- Business investment
- Climate change
- Competitiveness
- Economic growth
- Efficiency
- Energy and climate change
- Further Education
- Growth
- Higher Education
- Industrial strategy
- Innovation
- International
- Investment
- Productivity
- R&D
- Research
- Science (STEM) skills
- Science and society
- Science funding
- Security and resilience
- Starting a business
- University
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