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Context Sensing for Ubiquitous Computing
PhD Thesis Proposal Defence Title: "Context Sensing for Ubiquitous Computing" by Mr. Wei SUN Abstract: Ubiquitous computing is leading the third era of computing, after the ones represented by mainframe computers and personal computers. For many ubiquitous computing applications, context awareness is critical for performance optimization and user experience enrichment. Thanks to various tiny sensors embedded in devices such as smartphones, context information can be obtained by directly sensing the running environment. However, it is difficult to sense some certain types of context. In this thesis proposal, we address three challenging topics of context sensing for ubiquitous computing, namely indoor localization, neighbor discovery, and sleep monitoring. For each of these topics, we outline underlying challenges, analyze potential opportunities, present our solution, and evaluate it via simulation and experiments. The results show that our indoor localization scheme named MoLoc improves localization accuracy considerably over traditional WiFi fingerprinting approaches, that our neighbor discovery protocol named Hello advances the state of the art in terms of energy efficiency, and that our sleep monitoring system named SleepHunter detects sleep stages with an adequate accuracy in a non-obtrusive way. Finally, we indicate some thoughts on future research on the domain of context sensing. Date: Friday, 6 March 2015 Time: 2:00pm - 4:00pm Venue: Room 3494 lifts 25/26 Committee Members: Prof. Bo Li (Supervisor) Dr. Raymond Wong (Chairperson) Dr. Kai Chen Dr. Lei Chen **** ALL are Welcome ****