96 research outputs found

    Computational Analysis of Urban Places Using Mobile Crowdsensing

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    In cities, urban places provide a socio-cultural habitat for people to counterbalance the daily grind of urban life, an environment away from home and work. Places provide an environment for people to communicate, share perspectives, and in the process form new social connections. Due to the active role of places to the social fabric of city life, it is important to understand how people perceive and experience places. One fundamental construct that relates place and experience is ambiance, i.e., the impressions we ubiquitously form when we go out. Young people are key actors of urban life, specially at night, and as such play an equal role in co-creating and appropriating the urban space. Understanding how places and their youth inhabitants interact at night is a relevant urban issue. Until recently, our ability to assess the visual and perceptual qualities of urban spaces and to study the dynamics surrounding youth experiences in those spaces have been limited partly due to the lack of quantitative data. However, the growth of computational methods and tools including sensor-rich mobile devices, social multimedia platforms, and crowdsourcing tools have opened ways to measure urban perception at scale, and to deepen our understanding of nightlife as experienced by young people. In this thesis, as a first contribution, we present the design, implementation and computational analysis of four mobile crowdsensing studies involving youth populations from various countries to understand and infer phenomena related to urban places and people. We gathered a variety of explicit and implicit crowdsourced data including mobile sensor data and logs, survey responses, and multimedia content (images and videos) from hundreds of crowdworkers and thousands of users of mobile social networks. Second, we showed how crowdsensed images can be used for the computational characterization and analysis of urban perception in indoor and outdoor places. For both place types, urban perception impressions were elicited for several physical and psychological constructs using online crowdsourcing. Using low-level and deep learning features extracted from images, we automatically inferred crowdsourced judgments of indoor ambiance with a maximum R2 of 0.53 and outdoor perception with a maximum R2 of 0.49. Third, we demonstrated the feasibility to collect rich contextual data to study the physical mobility, activities, ambiance context, and social patterns of youth nightlife behavior. Fourth, using supervised machine learning techniques, we automatically classified drinking behavior of young people in an urban, real nightlife setting. Using features extracted from mobile sensor data and application logs, we obtained an overall accuracy of 76.7%. While this thesis contributes towards understanding urban perception and youth nightlife patterns in specific contexts, our research also contributes towards the computational understanding of urban places at scale with high spatial and temporal resolution, using a combination of mobile crowdsensing, social media, machine learning, multimedia analysis, and online crowdsourcing

    Why It Takes So Long to Connect to a WiFi Access Point

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    Today's WiFi networks deliver a large fraction of traffic. However, the performance and quality of WiFi networks are still far from satisfactory. Among many popular quality metrics (throughput, latency), the probability of successfully connecting to WiFi APs and the time cost of the WiFi connection set-up process are the two of the most critical metrics that affect WiFi users' experience. To understand the WiFi connection set-up process in real-world settings, we carry out measurement studies on 55 million mobile users from 44 representative cities associating with 77 million APs in 0.40.4 billion WiFi sessions, collected from a mobile "WiFi Manager" App that tops the Android/iOS App market. To the best of our knowledge, we are the first to do such large scale study on: how large the WiFi connection set-up time cost is, what factors affect the WiFi connection set-up process, and what can be done to reduce the WiFi connection set-up time cost. Based on the measurement analysis, we develop a machine learning based AP selection strategy that can significantly improve WiFi connection set-up performance, against the conventional strategy purely based on signal strength, by reducing the connection set-up failures from 33%33\% to 3.6%3.6\% and reducing 80%80\% time costs of the connection set-up processes by more than 1010 times.Comment: 11pages, conferenc

    Crowdsensing in Smart Cities: Overview, Platforms, and Environment Sensing Issues

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    [EN] Evidence shows that Smart Cities are starting to materialise in our lives through the gradual introduction of the Internet of Things (IoT) paradigm. In this scope, crowdsensing emerges as a powerful solution to address environmental monitoring, allowing to control air pollution levels in crowded urban areas in a distributed, collaborative, inexpensive and accurate manner. However, even though technology is already available, such environmental sensing devices have not yet reached consumers. In this paper, we present an analysis of candidate technologies for crowdsensing architectures, along with the requirements for empowering users with air monitoring capabilities. Specifically, we start by providing an overview of the most relevant IoT architectures and protocols. Then, we present the general design of an off-the-shelf mobile environmental sensor able to cope with air quality monitoring requirements; we explore different hardware options to develop the desired sensing unit using readily available devices, discussing the main technical issues associated with each option, thereby opening new opportunities in terms of environmental monitoring programs.This work was partially supported by the Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad, Programa Estatal de Investigacion, Desarrollo e Innovacion Orientada a los Retos de la Sociedad, Proyectos I+D+I 2014, Spain, under Grant TEC2014-52690-R, the Generalitat Valenciana, Spain, the Secretaria Nacional de Educacion Superior, Ciencia, Tecnologia e Innovacion del Ecuador (SENESCYT), and the Universidad de Cuenca.Alvear-Alvear, Ă“.; Tavares De Araujo Cesariny Calafate, CM.; Cano, J.; Manzoni, P. (2018). Crowdsensing in Smart Cities: Overview, Platforms, and Environment Sensing Issues. Sensors. 18(2):1-28. https://doi.org/10.3390/s18020460S12818

    How Physicality Enables Trust: A New Era of Trust-Centered Cyberphysical Systems

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    Multi-agent cyberphysical systems enable new capabilities in efficiency, resilience, and security. The unique characteristics of these systems prompt a reevaluation of their security concepts, including their vulnerabilities, and mechanisms to mitigate these vulnerabilities. This survey paper examines how advancement in wireless networking, coupled with the sensing and computing in cyberphysical systems, can foster novel security capabilities. This study delves into three main themes related to securing multi-agent cyberphysical systems. First, we discuss the threats that are particularly relevant to multi-agent cyberphysical systems given the potential lack of trust between agents. Second, we present prospects for sensing, contextual awareness, and authentication, enabling the inference and measurement of ``inter-agent trust" for these systems. Third, we elaborate on the application of quantifiable trust notions to enable ``resilient coordination," where ``resilient" signifies sustained functionality amid attacks on multiagent cyberphysical systems. We refer to the capability of cyberphysical systems to self-organize, and coordinate to achieve a task as autonomy. This survey unveils the cyberphysical character of future interconnected systems as a pivotal catalyst for realizing robust, trust-centered autonomy in tomorrow's world
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