Title :
User recruitment for mobile crowdsensing over opportunistic networks
Author :
Karaliopoulos, Merkouris ; Telelis, Orestis ; Koutsopoulos, Iordanis
Author_Institution :
Center for Res. & Technol. Hellas, Inf. Technol. Inst., Volos, Greece
fDate :
April 26 2015-May 1 2015
Abstract :
We look into the realization of mobile crowdsensing campaigns that draw on the opportunistic networking paradigm, as practised in delay-tolerant networks but also in the emerging device-to-device communication mode in cellular networks. In particular, we ask how mobile users can be optimally selected in order to generate the required space-time paths across the network for collecting data from a set of fixed locations. The users hold different roles in these paths, from collecting data with their sensing-enabled devices to relaying them across the network and uploading them to data collection points with Internet connectivity. We first consider scenarios with deterministic node mobility and formulate the selection of users as a minimum-cost set cover problem with a submodular objective function. We then generalize to more realistic settings with uncertainty about the user mobility. A methodology is devised for translating the statistics of individual user mobility to statistics of spacetime path formation and feeding them to the set cover problem formulation. We describe practical greedy heuristics for the resulting NP-hard problems and compute their approximation ratios. Our experimentation with real mobility datasets (a) illustrates the multiple tradeoffs between the campaign cost and duration, the bound on the hopcount of space-time paths, and the number of collection points; and (b) provides evidence that in realistic problem instances the heuristics perform much better than what their pessimistic worst-case bounds suggest.
Keywords :
mobile communication; NP-hard problems; cellular networks; delay tolerant networks; device-to-device communication mode; greedy heuristics; mobile crowdsensing; mobile users; opportunistic networks; space time paths; submodular objective function; user recruitment; Approximation methods; Conferences; Data collection; Mobile communication; Mobile computing; Recruitment; Sensors;
Conference_Titel :
Computer Communications (INFOCOM), 2015 IEEE Conference on
Conference_Location :
Kowloon
DOI :
10.1109/INFOCOM.2015.7218612