An energy-efficient quality adaptive framework for multi-modal sensor context recognition

  • Authors:
  • Nirmalya Roy;Archan Misra;Christine Julien;Sajal K. Das;Jit Biswas

  • Affiliations:
  • Institute for Infocomm Research, Singapore;Singapore Management University, Singapore;The University of Texas at Austin, USA;The University of Texas at Arlington, USA;Institute for Infocomm Research, Singapore

  • Venue:
  • PERCOM '11 Proceedings of the 2011 IEEE International Conference on Pervasive Computing and Communications
  • Year:
  • 2011

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Abstract

In pervasive computing environments, understanding the context of an entity is essential for adapting the application behavior to changing situations. In our view, context is a high-level representation of a user or entity's state and can capture location, activities, social relationships, capabilities, etc. Inherently, however, these high-level context metrics are difficult to capture using uni-modal sensors only, and must therefore be inferred with the help of multi-modal sensors. However a key challenge in supporting context-aware pervasive computing environments, is how to determine in an energy-efficient manner multiple (potentially competing) high-level context metrics simultaneously using low-level sensor data streams about the environment and the entities present therein. In this paper, we first highlight the intricacies of determining multiple context metrics as compared to a single context, and then develop a novel framework and practical implementation for this problem. The proposed framework captures the tradeoff between the accuracy of estimating multiple context metrics and the overhead incurred in acquiring the necessary sensor data stream. In particular, we develop a multi-context search heuristic algorithm that computes the optimal set of sensors contributing to the multi-context determination as well as the associated parameters of the sensing tasks. Our goal is to satisfy the application requirements for a specified accuracy at a minimum cost. We compare the performance of our heuristic based framework with a brute-forced approach for multi-context determination. Experimental results with SunSPOT sensors demonstrate the potential impact of the proposed framework.