HomeLab: a platform for conducting experiments with connected devices in the home

R. Singh, A. Brush, E. Filippov, D. Huang, Ratul Mahajan, Khurshed Mazhar, Amar Phanishayee, Arjmand Samuel
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Abstract

The downward spiral in the cost of connected devices and sensors (e.g., cameras, motion sensors, remote controlled light switches) has generated a vast amount of interest towards using them in the home environments. Companies and researchers are developing technologies that employ these devices in a diverse range of ways. These include improving energy efficiency, increasing comfort and convenience through automation, implementing security and monitoring, and providing in-home healthcare. However, conducting experimental work in this domain is extremely challenging today. Evaluating the effectiveness of research prototypes typically requires some form of deployment in real homes. This task is riddled with not only social and legal constraints, but also logistical and technical hurdles. Examples include recruiting participants, hardware and software setup in the home, training participants and residents who typically possess varying levels of technical expertise, and diverse security and privacy concerns. Because of these challenges, individual research groups rarely manage to deploy their prototypes on more than a dozen or so homes concentrated in their geographic area. Such deployments tend to lack the scale and diversity that is needed to confidently answer the research hypothesis. Our goal is to lower the barrier towards deploying experimental technology in a large number of geographically distributed homes.
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HomeLab:一个用家中联网设备进行实验的平台
连接设备和传感器(如摄像头、运动传感器、遥控灯开关)成本的螺旋式下降,引起了人们对在家庭环境中使用它们的极大兴趣。公司和研究人员正在开发以各种方式使用这些设备的技术。这些措施包括提高能源效率、通过自动化提高舒适度和便利性、实施安全和监控以及提供家庭医疗保健。然而,今天在这个领域进行实验工作是极具挑战性的。评估研究原型的有效性通常需要在真实家庭中进行某种形式的部署。这项任务不仅受到社会和法律的限制,而且还面临后勤和技术方面的障碍。例子包括招募参与者,在家中设置硬件和软件,培训通常拥有不同技术水平的参与者和居民,以及各种安全和隐私问题。由于这些挑战,个别研究小组很少能够在他们所在地理区域的十几个家庭中部署他们的原型。这种部署往往缺乏自信地回答研究假设所需的规模和多样性。我们的目标是降低在大量地理分布的家庭中部署实验技术的障碍。
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