DocumentCode
156816
Title
CrowdHelp: M-Health application for emergency response improvement through crowdsourced and sensor-detected information
Author
Besaleva, Liliya I. ; Weaver, Alfred C.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, USA
fYear
2014
fDate
9-11 April 2014
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
5
Abstract
Preventing natural disasters is beyond our capabilities, but providing better information to disaster management professionals (DMPs) and affected persons is not. Current disaster management systems get their primary inputs from 911 calls and from observations of first responders. Typically such interactions do not follow a prescribed scenario and they do not produce uniform results. Additionally, this process is slow and cumbersome and subject to transcription error [2][12]. We propose an expanded information gathering and distribution tool which uses crowdsourcing to deliver more accurate information to disaster managers more quickly than can be done with existing systems. Using our system, CrowdHelp, people within the radius of a natural disaster are able to send text, pictures, videos, locations, and descriptions of what they see. Our software analyzes the data received, authenticates the sender, removes inputs that are likely to be malicious, clusters reports by type, urgency, or location as desired by the human operator, then displays the results on a map along with suggestions to the operator concerning what type of help is most needed. CrowdHelp also collects additional sensor information from smartphones for future analysis by professional disaster management organizations.
Keywords
emergency management; smart phones; 911 calls; CrowdHelp; DMP; crowdsourcing; disaster management professionals; disaster management systems; disaster managers; distribution tool; expanded information gathering; natural disasters; professional disaster management organizations; sensor information; smartphones; transcription error; Earthquakes; Facebook; Media; Mobile communication; Organizations; Twitter; crowdsourcing; emergency preparedness; medical informatics; mobile technologies; trends; ubiquitous health;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Wireless Telecommunications Symposium (WTS), 2014
Conference_Location
Washington, DC
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/WTS.2014.6835005
Filename
6835005
Link To Document