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2005
Mobile
pollution sensors to be developed at Vanderbilt using Microsoft
grant
NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- Vanderbilt engineers have won an award from
Microsoft Corp. to develop a real-time, online, detailed and
accurate picture of air quality in large metropolitan areas like
Nashville. The mobile air quality monitoring system will make it
possible to monitor air quality more accurately than the current
system of fixed stations performing low-resolution sampling by
including car-mounted sensors that measure, process and report
emission levels.
Engineers in the Vanderbilt Institute for Software Integrated
Systems will adapt Microsoft SensorMap technology for this
purpose. SensorMap is a software platform designed to integrate
and publish various types of sensor data in real time on the
Internet.
The Vanderbilt team is one of 21 winners chosen from more than
140 university applicants worldwide in response to Microsoft
Research's SensorMap and Virtual Earth^(TM) request for
proposals.
"The ability to search for and analyze information within the
context of location is a field with great potential," said
Sailesh Chutani, director of external research and programs, the
arm of Microsoft Research that works closely with academic
institutions. "These researchers are using a powerful new
approach to solve fundamental problems, and our programs are
designed to help them in a number of ways -- funding to bring in
additional resources, software and data to use in experiments,
access to top researchers at Microsoft and collaboration with
the broader, global research community."
According to principal investigator Akos Ledeczi, the system
being built with the $70,000 grant will include five prototype
sensors that can be mounted on vehicles. "We will develop the
sensors as well as the necessary infrastructure to measure the
pollutants, gather, process and visualize the data and to deploy
the system in the Nashville metropolitan area to provide a
continuous live data feed on the SensorMap portal," he said.
Ledeczi, who is a research assistant professor of electrical
engineering at Vanderbilt, explained that when the
sensor-carrying car is in motion, the sensor will sample the
pollutants every few seconds, noting time and location of each
sample. When the car comes into contact with a WiFi hotspot, it
will upload the data to the SensorMap portal, where a detailed
picture of the air quality in the area will be displayed.
"This will push the limits of the SensorMap project by proposing
ways to handle mobile sensors, developing more advanced data
aggregation algorithms and new visualization methods," Ledeczi
said.
Assistant Professor of Computer Science Xenofon Koutsoukos and
Research Scientist Engineer Peter Volgyesi will serve as
co-principal investigators on the project.
Vanderbilt University is a private research university of
approximately 6,300 undergraduates and 4,600 graduate and
professional students. Founded in 1873, the University comprises
10 schools, a public policy institute, a distinguished medical
center and The Freedom Forum First Amendment Center. Vanderbilt,
ranked as one of the nation's top
universities, offers undergraduate programs in the liberal arts
and sciences, engineering, music, education and human
development, and a full range of graduate and professional
degrees.
Contact:
Vivian Cooper,
(615) 343-6314
vivi.cooper@vanderbilt.edu
or
David F. Salisbury,
(615) 343-6803
david.f.salisbury@vanderbilt.edu