• DocumentCode
    169004
  • Title

    Using humans as sensors: An estimation-theoretic perspective

  • Author

    Dong Wang ; Amin, Md Tawfiq ; Shen Li ; Abdelzaher, Tarek ; Kaplan, Lance ; Siyu Gu ; Chenji Pan ; Liu, Hongying ; Aggarwal, Charu C. ; Ganti, Raman ; Xinlei Wang ; Mohapatra, Prasant ; Szymanski, Bogdan ; Hieu Le

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    15-17 April 2014
  • Firstpage
    35
  • Lastpage
    46
  • Abstract
    The explosive growth in social network content suggests that the largest “sensor network” yet might be human. Extending the participatory sensing model, this paper explores the prospect of utilizing social networks as sensor networks, which gives rise to an interesting reliable sensing problem. In this problem, individuals are represented by sensors (data sources) who occasionally make observations about the physical world. These observations may be true or false, and hence are viewed as binary claims. The reliable sensing problem is to determine the correctness of reported observations. From a networked sensing standpoint, what makes this sensing problem formulation different is that, in the case of human participants, not only is the reliability of sources usually unknown but also the original data provenance may be uncertain. Individuals may report observations made by others as their own. The contribution of this paper lies in developing a model that considers the impact of such information sharing on the analytical foundations of reliable sensing, and embed it into a tool called Apollo that uses Twitter as a “sensor network” for observing events in the physical world. Evaluation, using Twitter-based case-studies, shows good correspondence between observations deemed correct by Apollo and ground truth.
  • Keywords
    Internet; estimation theory; sensors; social networking (online); Apollo; Twitter-based case-studies; estimation-theoretic perspective; humans; information sharing; largest sensor network; networked sensing standpoint; participatory sensing model; reliable sensing problem; sensing problem formulation; sensors; social network content; Computer network reliability; Maximum likelihood estimation; Reliability; Sensors; Silicon; Twitter; data reliability; expectation maximization; humans as sensors; maximum likelihood estimation; social sensing; uncertain data provenance;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Information Processing in Sensor Networks, IPSN-14 Proceedings of the 13th International Symposium on
  • Conference_Location
    Berlin
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4799-3146-0
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/IPSN.2014.6846739
  • Filename
    6846739