6th International Conference on Mobile Computing, Applications and Services

Research Article

Alien vs. Mobile User Game: Fast and Efficient Area Coverage in Crowdsensing

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  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.4108/icst.mobicase.2014.257779,
        author={Manoop Talasila and Reza Curtmola and Cristian Borcea},
        title={Alien vs. Mobile User Game: Fast and Efficient Area Coverage in Crowdsensing},
        proceedings={6th International Conference on Mobile Computing, Applications and Services},
        publisher={IEEE},
        proceedings_a={MOBICASE},
        year={2014},
        month={11},
        keywords={mobile crowdsensing smart phones incentives area coverage},
        doi={10.4108/icst.mobicase.2014.257779}
    }
    
  • Manoop Talasila
    Reza Curtmola
    Cristian Borcea
    Year: 2014
    Alien vs. Mobile User Game: Fast and Efficient Area Coverage in Crowdsensing
    MOBICASE
    IEEE
    DOI: 10.4108/icst.mobicase.2014.257779
Manoop Talasila1,*, Reza Curtmola1, Cristian Borcea1
  • 1: New Jersey Institute of Technology
*Contact email: mt57@njit.edu

Abstract

Mobile crowdsensing enables real-time sensing of the physical world. However, providing good sensing coverage of an entire area may prove difficult. It is possible to collect a disproportionate amount of data from very popular regions in the area, while the unpopular regions remain uncovered. To address this problem, we propose a model for collecting crowdsensing data based on incentivizing smart phone users to play sensing games, which provide in-game incentives to convince participants to cover all the regions of a target area. We designed and implemented a first person shooter sensing game, “Alien vs. Mobile User”, which employs techniques to attract users to unpopular regions. Our prototype Android game collectsWiFi data to create a campus coverage map. The results from a user study show that mobile gaming ensures high coverage, and we observe that the proposed game design succeeds in achieving good player engagement. Furthermore, we compare three strategies for area coverage in terms of coverage time and coverage effort for users. The simulation results demonstrate that Progressive Movement is the best strategy because it manages to quickly entice users from popular regions to unpopular ones with a reasonable coverage effort.