15 research outputs found
ExerLink: Enabling Pervasive Social Exergames with Heterogeneous Exercise Devices
We envision that diverse social exercising games, or exergames, will emerge, featuring much richer interactivity with immersive game play experiences. Further, the recent advances of mobile devices and wireless networking will make such social engagement more pervasive - people carry portable exergame devices (e.g., jump ropes) and interact with remote users anytime, anywhere. Towards this goal, we explore the potential of using heterogeneous exercise devices as game controllers for a multi-player social exergame; e.g., playing a boat paddling game with two remote exercisers (one with a jump rope, and the other with a treadmill). In this paper, we propose a novel platform called ExerLink that converts exercise intensity to game inputs and intelligently balances intensity/delay variations for fair game play experiences. We report the design considerations and guidelines obtained from the design and development processes of game controllers. We validate the efficacy of game controllers and demonstrate the feasibility of social exergames with heterogeneous exercise devices via extensive human subject studies.
Exploring inter-child behavioral relativity in a shared social environment: a field study in a kindergarten
A kindergarten is an interesting community of young children. The children continuously share their interactions and experiences, and grow along similar developmental stages. In this setting, studying relative differences among them can be an interesting approach to investigating how to help their individual and social development. In this study, we present our intuition on inter-child behavioral relativity and apply it to a real kindergarten environment. We conduct a close user study necessitating the monitoring of the children's behavior. Then, utilizing wearable sensor technologies, we perform a field study to explore various interesting aspects of behavioral relativity in an automatic and quantitative fashion. We consulted the kindergarten teachers with our results obtained from our field study in order to validate the practical benefits in the kindergarten environment. We further discuss the potential, limitations, and opportunities of our approach.1
Seemon: scalable and energy-efficient context monitoring framework for sensor-rich mobile environments
Proactively providing services to mobile individuals is essential for emerging ubiquitous applications. The major challenge in providing users with proactive services lies in continuously monitoring their contexts based on numerous sensors. The context monitoring with rich sensors imposes heavy workloads on mobile devices with limited computing and battery power. We present SeeMon, a scalable and energy-efficient context monitoring framework for sensor-rich, resource-limited mobile environments. Running on a personal mobile device, SeeMon effectively performs context monitoring involving numerous sensors and applications. On top of SeeMon, multiple applications on the device can proactively understand users ’ contexts and react appropriately. This paper proposes a novel context monitoring approach that provides efficient processing and sensor control mechanisms. We implement and test a prototype system on two mobile devices: a UMPC and a wearable device with a diverse set of sensors. Example applications are also developed based on the implemented system. Experimental results show that SeeMon achieves a high level of scalability and energy efficiency
RubberBand: augmenting teacher's awareness of spatially isolated children on kindergarten field trips
On school field trips, chaperoning teachers' foremost concern is the safety of the children, particularly ensuring that none of them go missing. However, they have limited attention resources and face many challenges in keeping track of their charges. We present RubberBand, an assistive application that helps alleviate the teacher's burden. Our approach adapts to diverse field trip environmental and child behavioral dynamicity, utilizing observations of the relative dispersion of children and their tendency to form sub-groups.1
Optimized Lossless Embedded Compression for Mobile Multimedia Applications
Power consumption is a critical design factor in modern mobile chip design, in which the memory system with dynamic random-access memory (DRAM) consumes more than half of the entire system’s power. Without DRAM bandwidth compression, extreme multimedia operations such as 8K high dynamic range (HDR) recording and 8K video conference calling are not possible without sacrificing image quality or trimming because of thermal limitations or battery time sustainability constraints. Since heterogeneous processors are substantially involved in managing various types of fallbacks or software solutions, complicated compression algorithms for high-compression ratios are not actually adaptable owing to timing closure problems or high throughput requirements. In this paper, we propose evaluation metrics to assess lossless embedded compression (LEC) algorithms to reflect realistic design considerations for mobile multimedia scenarios. Furthermore, we introduce an optimized LEC implementation for contemporary multimedia applications in mobile devices based on the proposed metrics. The proposed LEC implementation enhances the compression ratio of LEC algorithms in other commercial application processors for contemporary premium smartphones by up to 9.2% on average, while maintaining the same timing closure condition
Maintaining Consistency Under Isolation Relaxation of Web Services Transactions
Abstract. For efficiently managing Web Services (WS) transactions which are executed across multiple loosely-coupled autonomous organizations, isolation is commonly relaxed. A Web services operation of a transaction releases locks on its resources once its jobs are completed without waiting for the completions of other operations. However, those early unlocked resources can be seen by other transac-tions, which can spoil data integrity and causes incorrect outcomes. Existing WS transaction standards do not consider this problem. In this paper, we propose a mechanism to ensure the consistent executions of isolation-relaxing WS transac-tions. The mechanism effectively detects inconsistent states of transactions with a notion of a completion dependency and recovers them to consistent states. We also propose a new Web services Transaction Dependency management Protocol (WTDP). WTDP helps organizations manage the WS transactions easily without data inconsistency. WTDP is designed to be compliant with a representative WS transaction standard, the Web Services Transactions specifications, for easy inte-gration into existing WS transaction systems. We prototyped a WTDP-based WS transaction management system to validate our protocol.