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Building a sensor network of mobile phones
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Information Processing In Sensor Networks archive
Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Information processing in sensor networks table of contents
Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
DEMONSTRATION SESSION: Demo abstracts table of contents
Pages: 547 - 548  
Year of Publication: 2007
ISBN:978-1-59593-638-X
Authors
Aman Kansal  Microsoft Research
Michel Goraczko  Microsoft Research
Feng Zhao  Microsoft Research
Sponsors
ACM: Association for Computing Machinery
SIGBED: ACM Special Interest Group on Embedded Systems
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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ABSTRACT

Mobile phones have two sensors: a camera and a microphone. The widespread and ubiquitous nature of mobile phones around the world makes it attractive to build a large-scale sensor network using the phones as its sensor nodes. There are several interesting challenges in realizing such a system, such as providing efficient methods for the sensor nodes to make their data available to the network, allowing the sensor network applications to access the data from potentially disconnected and highly mobile devices, ensuring that privacy constraints are met, and allowing application developers to program the sensor network as required to build new applications. We demonstrate an initial system prototype that addresses some of these concerns.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
1
Jeff Burke, Deborah Estrin, Mark Hansen, Andrew Parker, Nithya Ramanathan, Sasank Reddy, and Mani B. Srivastava. Participatory sensing. In ACM Sensys World Sensor Web Workshop, Boulder, Colorado, USA, October 2006.
 
2
Sensorplanet. http://www.sensorplanet.org/.
 
3
Carlo Ratti, Andres Sevtsuk, Sonya Huang, and Rudolf Pailer. Mobile landscapes: Graz in real time. http://senseable.mit.edu/graz/.
4
 
5
Shane B. Eisenman, Nicholas D. Lane, Emiliano Miluzzoand Ronald A. Peterson, Gahng-Seop Ahn, and Andrew T. Campbell. Metrosense project: People-centric sensing at scale. In ACM Sensys World Sensor Web Workshop, Boulder, Colorado, USA, October 2006.


Collaborative Colleagues:
Aman Kansal: colleagues
Michel Goraczko: colleagues
Feng Zhao: colleagues