• DocumentCode
    1772882
  • Title

    SEW-ing a Simple Endorsement Web to incentivize trustworthy participatory sensing

  • Author

    Tie Luo ; Kanhere, Salil S. ; Hwee-Pink Tan

  • Author_Institution
    Inst. for Infocomm Res., A*STAR, Singapore, Singapore
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    June 30 2014-July 3 2014
  • Firstpage
    636
  • Lastpage
    644
  • Abstract
    Two crucial issues to the success of participatory sensing are (a) how to incentivize the large crowd of mobile users to participate and (b) how to ensure the sensing data to be trustworthy. While they are traditionally being studied separately in the literature, this paper proposes a Simple Endorsement Web (SEW) to address both issues in a synergistic manner. The key idea is (a) introducing a social concept called nepotism into participatory sensing, by linking mobile users into a social “web of participants” with endorsement relations, and (b) overlaying this network with investment-like economic implications. The social and economic layers are interleaved to provision and enhance incentives and trustworthiness. We elaborate the social implications of SEW, and analyze the economic implications under a Stackelberg game framework. We derive the optimal design parameter that maximizes the utility of the sensing campaign organizer, while ensuring participants to strictly have incentive to participate. We also design algorithms for participants to optimally “sew” SEW, namely to manipulate the endorsement links of SEW such that their economic benefits are maximized and social constrains are satisfied. Finally, we provide two numerical examples for an intuitive understanding.
  • Keywords
    Internet; mobile communication; mobile computing; trusted computing; SEW; SEW-ing; Stackelberg game framework; incentivize trustworthy participatory sensing; investment like economic implications; mobile users; nepotism; optimal design parameter; sensing data; simple endorsement Web; social constrains; Biological system modeling; Conferences; Economics; Games; Mobile communication; Nash equilibrium; Sensors; Nepotism; altruism; beneficiary effect; crowdsourcing; human-centric computing; social networks; web of participants; witness effect;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Sensing, Communication, and Networking (SECON), 2014 Eleventh Annual IEEE International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Singapore
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/SAHCN.2014.6990404
  • Filename
    6990404