Title
Smartphone sensing offloading for efficiently supporting social sensing applications.
Abstract
Mobile phones play a pivotal role in supporting ubiquitous and unobtrusive sensing of human activities. However, maintaining a highly accurate record of a user's behavior throughout the day imposes significant energy demands on the phone's battery. In this work, we investigate a new approach that can lead to significant energy savings for mobile applications that require continuous sensing of social activities. This is achieved by opportunistically offloading sensing to sensors embedded in the environment, leveraging sensing that may be available in typical modern buildings (e.g., room occupancy sensors, RFID access control systems). In this article, we present the design, implementation, and evaluation of METIS: an adaptive mobile sensing platform that efficiently supports social sensing applications. The platform implements a novel sensor task distribution scheme that dynamically decides whether to perform sensing on the phone or in the infrastructure, considering the energy consumption, accuracy, and mobility patterns of the user. By comparing the sensing distribution scheme with sensing performed solely on the phone or exclusively on the fixed remote sensors, we show, through benchmarks using real traces, that the opportunistic sensing distribution achieves over 60% and 40% energy savings, respectively. This is confirmed through a real world deployment in an office environment for over a month: we developed a social application over our frameworks, that is able to infer the collaborations and meetings of the users. In this setting the system preserves over 35% more battery life over pure phone sensing.
Year
DOI
Venue
2014
10.1016/j.pmcj.2013.10.005
Pervasive and Mobile Computing
Keywords
Field
DocType
novel sensor task distribution,mobile application,mobile phone,social activity,significant energy demand,distribution scheme,energy saving,energy consumption,significant energy saving,pure phone,energy efficiency
Sensing applications,Software deployment,Computer science,Efficient energy use,Phone,Access control,Battery (electricity),Continuous sensing,Energy consumption,Embedded system
Journal
Volume
ISSN
Citations 
10
1574-1192
13
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.53
32
5
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Kiran K. Rachuri157028.03
Christos Efstratiou297589.76
Ilias Leontiadis376144.38
Cecilia Mascolo45856342.94
Peter J. Rentfrow539118.89