3,688 research outputs found
Context-Aware Hierarchical Online Learning for Performance Maximization in Mobile Crowdsourcing
In mobile crowdsourcing (MCS), mobile users accomplish outsourced human
intelligence tasks. MCS requires an appropriate task assignment strategy, since
different workers may have different performance in terms of acceptance rate
and quality. Task assignment is challenging, since a worker's performance (i)
may fluctuate, depending on both the worker's current personal context and the
task context, (ii) is not known a priori, but has to be learned over time.
Moreover, learning context-specific worker performance requires access to
context information, which may not be available at a central entity due to
communication overhead or privacy concerns. Additionally, evaluating worker
performance might require costly quality assessments. In this paper, we propose
a context-aware hierarchical online learning algorithm addressing the problem
of performance maximization in MCS. In our algorithm, a local controller (LC)
in the mobile device of a worker regularly observes the worker's context,
her/his decisions to accept or decline tasks and the quality in completing
tasks. Based on these observations, the LC regularly estimates the worker's
context-specific performance. The mobile crowdsourcing platform (MCSP) then
selects workers based on performance estimates received from the LCs. This
hierarchical approach enables the LCs to learn context-specific worker
performance and it enables the MCSP to select suitable workers. In addition,
our algorithm preserves worker context locally, and it keeps the number of
required quality assessments low. We prove that our algorithm converges to the
optimal task assignment strategy. Moreover, the algorithm outperforms simpler
task assignment strategies in experiments based on synthetic and real data.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figure
CENTURION: Incentivizing Multi-Requester Mobile Crowd Sensing
The recent proliferation of increasingly capable mobile devices has given
rise to mobile crowd sensing (MCS) systems that outsource the collection of
sensory data to a crowd of participating workers that carry various mobile
devices. Aware of the paramount importance of effectively incentivizing
participation in such systems, the research community has proposed a wide
variety of incentive mechanisms. However, different from most of these existing
mechanisms which assume the existence of only one data requester, we consider
MCS systems with multiple data requesters, which are actually more common in
practice. Specifically, our incentive mechanism is based on double auction, and
is able to stimulate the participation of both data requesters and workers. In
real practice, the incentive mechanism is typically not an isolated module, but
interacts with the data aggregation mechanism that aggregates workers' data.
For this reason, we propose CENTURION, a novel integrated framework for
multi-requester MCS systems, consisting of the aforementioned incentive and
data aggregation mechanism. CENTURION's incentive mechanism satisfies
truthfulness, individual rationality, computational efficiency, as well as
guaranteeing non-negative social welfare, and its data aggregation mechanism
generates highly accurate aggregated results. The desirable properties of
CENTURION are validated through both theoretical analysis and extensive
simulations
Location Privacy in Spatial Crowdsourcing
Spatial crowdsourcing (SC) is a new platform that engages individuals in
collecting and analyzing environmental, social and other spatiotemporal
information. With SC, requesters outsource their spatiotemporal tasks to a set
of workers, who will perform the tasks by physically traveling to the tasks'
locations. This chapter identifies privacy threats toward both workers and
requesters during the two main phases of spatial crowdsourcing, tasking and
reporting. Tasking is the process of identifying which tasks should be assigned
to which workers. This process is handled by a spatial crowdsourcing server
(SC-server). The latter phase is reporting, in which workers travel to the
tasks' locations, complete the tasks and upload their reports to the SC-server.
The challenge is to enable effective and efficient tasking as well as reporting
in SC without disclosing the actual locations of workers (at least until they
agree to perform a task) and the tasks themselves (at least to workers who are
not assigned to those tasks). This chapter aims to provide an overview of the
state-of-the-art in protecting users' location privacy in spatial
crowdsourcing. We provide a comparative study of a diverse set of solutions in
terms of task publishing modes (push vs. pull), problem focuses (tasking and
reporting), threats (server, requester and worker), and underlying technical
approaches (from pseudonymity, cloaking, and perturbation to exchange-based and
encryption-based techniques). The strengths and drawbacks of the techniques are
highlighted, leading to a discussion of open problems and future work
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