In this work we present CitiSense, a new kind of "citizen
infrastructure" for the monitoring of pollution and environmental conditions
that users are exposed to. By utilizing mobile phones and affordable, small
sensors placed in the environment and carried by users, data about pollutants
such as ozone and carbon monoxide is collected and used to provide real-time
feedback to users and enable them to make healthy changes in their behavior.
Results can be reported to a back-end server for further processing and
learning, allowing other stakeholders to better understand how diseases such as
asthma develop and to help coordinate efforts within a user's community to
improve conditions. What differentiates CitiSense from previous projects of
this sort is the design of a complete system that addresses issues of mobile
power management, data security, privacy, inference with commodity sensors, and
integration into a highly extensible and adaptive infrastructure comprising of
Open Rich Services (ORS). We discuss the design goals of the CitiSense project,
our progress towards the vision of ubiquitous environmental sensing in San
Diego, and preliminary results for energy management policies for sensor nodes
and mobile phones.
Pre-2018 CSE ID: CS2011-0961