Human sensors: Case-study of open-ended community sensing in developing regions

With the growing number of cities and population, continuous monitoring of city's infrastructure and automated collection of day-to-day events (such as traffic jam) is essential and can help in improving life style of citizens. It is extremely costly and ineffective to install hardware sensors to sense these events in developing regions. Due to advent of smartphones, citizens can play role of sensors and actively participate in collection of the events which can be shared with others for information or can be used in decisions which affects city development. In this paper, we describe an architecture of crowdsensing testbed for capturing and processing events affecting citizens in cities in India. One of the design principle of our testbed is that it encourages users to do an open-ended sensing under five broad categories: Civic complaints, traffic, neighbourhood issues, emergency and others. As part of testbed, we allow events submissions from different submission modes i.e. mobile application, SMSes and web. Our mobile application exploits different sensing interfaces provided by today's smartphones to add contextual data with event reports such as images, audio, fine-grained location etc. Proposed testbed is used by university students across India to report event happening around them. Finally, we describe the data collected and uncover some of challenges and opportunities which may help future designs of crowdsensing based systems.

[1]  Ryan Newton,et al.  The pothole patrol: using a mobile sensor network for road surface monitoring , 2008, MobiSys '08.

[2]  Hari Balakrishnan,et al.  Code in the air: simplifying sensing and coordination tasks on smartphones , 2012, HotMobile '12.

[3]  Zhigang Liu,et al.  The Jigsaw continuous sensing engine for mobile phone applications , 2010, SenSys '10.

[4]  Ramesh Govindan,et al.  Medusa: a programming framework for crowd-sensing applications , 2012, MobiSys '12.

[5]  Deborah Estrin,et al.  PEIR, the personal environmental impact report, as a platform for participatory sensing systems research , 2009, MobiSys '09.

[6]  Ramachandran Ramjee,et al.  Nericell: rich monitoring of road and traffic conditions using mobile smartphones , 2008, SenSys '08.

[7]  Osamuyimen Stewart,et al.  Designing crowdsourcing community for the enterprise , 2009, HCOMP '09.

[8]  Vinayak S. Naik,et al.  Low Energy and Sufficiently Accurate Localization for Non-smartphones , 2012, 2012 IEEE 13th International Conference on Mobile Data Management.

[9]  Fan Ye,et al.  Mobile crowdsensing: current state and future challenges , 2011, IEEE Communications Magazine.

[10]  Ravin Balakrishnan,et al.  Paying in Kind for Crowdsourced Work in Developing Regions , 2012, Pervasive.

[11]  Vinayak S. Naik,et al.  SMSAssassin: crowdsourcing driven mobile-based system for SMS spam filtering , 2011, HotMobile '11.

[12]  Shourya Roy,et al.  A survey of types of text noise and techniques to handle noisy text , 2009, AND '09.

[13]  Mark H. Hansen,et al.  Participatory Sensing: A Citizen-Powered Approach to Illuminating the Patterns that Shape our World , 2009 .