Abstract
Context-awareness is getting increasingly important for a range of mobile and pervasive applications on nowadays smartphones. Whereas human-centric contexts (e.g., indoor/ outdoor, at home/in office, driving/walking) have been extensively researched, few attempts have studied from phones' perspective (e.g., on table/sofa, in pocket/bag/hand). We refer to such immediate surroundings as micro-environment, usually several to a dozen of centimeters, around a phone. In this study, we design and implement Sherlock, a micro-environment sensing platform that automatically records sensor hints and characterizes the micro-environment of smartphones. The platform runs as a daemon process on a smartphone and provides finer-grained environment information to upper layer applications via programming interfaces. Sherlock is a unified framework covering the major cases of phone usage, placement, attitude, and interaction in practical uses with complicated user habits. As a long-term running middleware, Sherlock considers both energy consumption and user friendship. We prototype Sherlock on Android OS and systematically evaluate its performance with data collected on fifteen scenarios during three weeks. The preliminary results show that Sherlock achieves low energy cost, rapid system deployment, and competitive sensing accuracy. © 2013 IEEE.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 6714451 |
| Pages (from-to) | 3295-3305 |
| Journal | IEEE Transactions on Parallel and Distributed Systems |
| Volume | 25 |
| Issue number | 12 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 1 Dec 2014 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Bibliographical note
Publication details (e.g. title, author(s), publication statuses and dates) are captured on an “AS IS” and “AS AVAILABLE” basis at the time of record harvesting from the data source. Suggestions for further amendments or supplementary information can be sent to [email protected].Research Keywords
- Context-awareness sensing
- Mobile computing
- Smartphone