2014
García-Martí, Irene; Torres-Sospedra, Joaquín; Rodríguez-Pupo, Luis Enrique
A comparative study on VGI and professional noise data Proceedings Article
In: Huerta-Guijarro, Joaquín; Schade, Sven; Granell-Canut, Carlos (Ed.): Connecting a Digital Europe through Location and Place. Proceedings of the AGILE'2014 International Conference on Geographic Information Science., AGILE Digital Editions, 2014, ISBN: 978-90-816960-4-3.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Citizen Science, crowdsourcing, environmental monitoring, Geographic Information, noise pollution, Smart Cities, VGI
@inproceedings{GarciaMarti2014,
title = {A comparative study on VGI and professional noise data},
author = { Irene García-Martí and Joaquín Torres-Sospedra and Luis Enrique Rodríguez-Pupo},
editor = {Joaquín Huerta-Guijarro and Sven Schade and Carlos Granell-Canut},
url = {http://repositori.uji.es/xmlui/handle/10234/98489},
isbn = {978-90-816960-4-3},
year = {2014},
date = {2014-01-01},
booktitle = {Connecting a Digital Europe through Location and Place. Proceedings of the AGILE'2014 International Conference on Geographic Information Science.},
publisher = {AGILE Digital Editions},
abstract = {The ubiquitous nature of mobile devices and its growing presence in urban areas, turn them up into low cost environmental monitoring platforms. In this field, several authors made different efforts to provide alternatives to Sensor Networks, to assess noise pollution in cities using crowdsourcing techniques. In this sense, citizens might potentially produce large spatio-temporal datasets using their mobile devices to measure noise levels. There are few attempts of assessing the quality of the mobile noise samples on a real scenario and compare them to commercial data to evaluate if they are reliable enough. This contribution reviews the existing applications to collect or assess the quality of noise samples when they are used as sound level meters. Moreover, it presents the results of our experiment: the volunteer noise dataset generated in a ‘mapping party' on our campus is compared to professional data. Results show that VGI data might be sufficient for multiple daily situations.},
keywords = {Citizen Science, crowdsourcing, environmental monitoring, Geographic Information, noise pollution, Smart Cities, VGI},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
The ubiquitous nature of mobile devices and its growing presence in urban areas, turn them up into low cost environmental monitoring platforms. In this field, several authors made different efforts to provide alternatives to Sensor Networks, to assess noise pollution in cities using crowdsourcing techniques. In this sense, citizens might potentially produce large spatio-temporal datasets using their mobile devices to measure noise levels. There are few attempts of assessing the quality of the mobile noise samples on a real scenario and compare them to commercial data to evaluate if they are reliable enough. This contribution reviews the existing applications to collect or assess the quality of noise samples when they are used as sound level meters. Moreover, it presents the results of our experiment: the volunteer noise dataset generated in a ‘mapping party' on our campus is compared to professional data. Results show that VGI data might be sufficient for multiple daily situations.