The Rise of People-Centric Sensing

  • Authors:
  • Andrew T. Campbell;Shane B. Eisenman;Nicholas D. Lane;Emiliano Miluzzo;Ronald A. Peterson;Hong Lu;Xiao Zheng;Mirco Musolesi;Kristóf Fodor;Gahng-Seop Ahn

  • Affiliations:
  • Dartmouth College;Columbia University;Dartmouth College;Dartmouth College;Dartmouth College;Dartmouth College;Dartmouth College;Dartmouth College;Dartmouth College;Columbia University

  • Venue:
  • IEEE Internet Computing
  • Year:
  • 2008

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Abstract

Technological advances in sensing, computation, storage, and communications will turn the near-ubiquitous mobile phone into a global mobile sensing device. People-centric sensing will help drive this trend by enabling a different way to sense, learn, visualize, and share information about ourselves, friends, communities, the way we live, and the world we live in. It juxtaposes the traditional view of mesh sensor networks with one in which people, carrying mobile devices, enable opportunistic sensing coverage. In the MetroSense Project's vision of people-centric sensing, users are the key architectural system component, enabling a host of new application areas such as personal, public, and social sensing.