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Navigating a Speckled World: Interacting with Wireless Sensor Networks

Leach, Matthew; Benyon, David

Authors

Matthew Leach

David Benyon



Contributors

Monica Wachowicz
Editor

Abstract

The Speckled Computing project is a large multisite research project based in Scotland, UK. The aim of the project is to investigate, prototype, and produce tiny (1mm3) computational devices, called Specks, that can be configured into wireless sensor networks, called SpeckNets. Our particular interest is in how people might interact in such environments, what interaction tools they require, and what characteristics are required to be provided by the operating system of the Specks. Interaction in these environments places the human physically inside an information space. At one time, the human may be interacting with one Speck, at another with a hundred, and at another with several thousand. Moreover, the Specks themselves have no input method, apart from their sensors, and no output display. We explore these issues through taking some theories of distributed information spaces, some design principles from information visualization, and report on some empirical studies of prototypes and simulations that have been developed.

Citation

Leach, M., & Benyon, D. (2010). Navigating a Speckled World: Interacting with Wireless Sensor Networks. In M. Wachowicz (Ed.), Movement-Aware Applications for Sustainable Mobility (229-242). IGI Global. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-61520-769-5.ch014

Publication Date 2010
Deposit Date Aug 1, 2016
Publisher IGI Global
Pages 229-242
Book Title Movement-Aware Applications for Sustainable Mobility
ISBN 9781615207695; 9781615207701
DOI https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-61520-769-5.ch014
Keywords Speckled Computing, computational devices, Specks, wireless sensor networks, Specknets,
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/321774