Innovations in Environmental Monitoring Using Mobile Phone Technology – A Review

In recent years, the use of mobile phones and tablets for personal communication has increased dramatically, with over 1 billion smartphones out of a total of 5 billion mobile phones worldwide. The infrastructure and technology underlying these devices has improved to a level where it is now possib...

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Main Authors: Matt Aitkenhead, David Donnelly, Malcolm Coull, Emily Hastings
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Association of Online Engineering (IAOE) 2014-04-01
Series:International Journal of Interactive Mobile Technologies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://online-journals.org/index.php/i-jim/article/view/3645
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spelling doaj-0066043c5bbd45d8b84d5b866f7233dc2021-09-02T10:32:37ZengInternational Association of Online Engineering (IAOE)International Journal of Interactive Mobile Technologies1865-79232014-04-0182425010.3991/ijim.v8i2.36451951Innovations in Environmental Monitoring Using Mobile Phone Technology – A ReviewMatt Aitkenhead0David Donnelly1Malcolm Coull2Emily Hastings3The James Hutton InstituteThe James Hutton InstituteThe James Hutton InstituteThe James Hutton InstituteIn recent years, the use of mobile phones and tablets for personal communication has increased dramatically, with over 1 billion smartphones out of a total of 5 billion mobile phones worldwide. The infrastructure and technology underlying these devices has improved to a level where it is now possible to integrate sensor technology directly and use them to acquire new data. Given the available resources and the number of technical challenges that have already been overcome, it would seem a natural progression to use mobile communication technology for field-based environmental monitoring. In this work, we review existing technology for acquiring, processing and reporting on environmental data in the field. The objective is to demonstrate whether or not it is possible to use off-the-shelf technology for environmental monitoring. We show several levels at which this challenge is being approached, and discuss examples of technology that have been produced.http://online-journals.org/index.php/i-jim/article/view/3645Environmental monitoringmobile technologyappssensorsmobile phones
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matt Aitkenhead
David Donnelly
Malcolm Coull
Emily Hastings
spellingShingle Matt Aitkenhead
David Donnelly
Malcolm Coull
Emily Hastings
Innovations in Environmental Monitoring Using Mobile Phone Technology – A Review
International Journal of Interactive Mobile Technologies
Environmental monitoring
mobile technology
apps
sensors
mobile phones
author_facet Matt Aitkenhead
David Donnelly
Malcolm Coull
Emily Hastings
author_sort Matt Aitkenhead
title Innovations in Environmental Monitoring Using Mobile Phone Technology – A Review
title_short Innovations in Environmental Monitoring Using Mobile Phone Technology – A Review
title_full Innovations in Environmental Monitoring Using Mobile Phone Technology – A Review
title_fullStr Innovations in Environmental Monitoring Using Mobile Phone Technology – A Review
title_full_unstemmed Innovations in Environmental Monitoring Using Mobile Phone Technology – A Review
title_sort innovations in environmental monitoring using mobile phone technology – a review
publisher International Association of Online Engineering (IAOE)
series International Journal of Interactive Mobile Technologies
issn 1865-7923
publishDate 2014-04-01
description In recent years, the use of mobile phones and tablets for personal communication has increased dramatically, with over 1 billion smartphones out of a total of 5 billion mobile phones worldwide. The infrastructure and technology underlying these devices has improved to a level where it is now possible to integrate sensor technology directly and use them to acquire new data. Given the available resources and the number of technical challenges that have already been overcome, it would seem a natural progression to use mobile communication technology for field-based environmental monitoring. In this work, we review existing technology for acquiring, processing and reporting on environmental data in the field. The objective is to demonstrate whether or not it is possible to use off-the-shelf technology for environmental monitoring. We show several levels at which this challenge is being approached, and discuss examples of technology that have been produced.
topic Environmental monitoring
mobile technology
apps
sensors
mobile phones
url http://online-journals.org/index.php/i-jim/article/view/3645
work_keys_str_mv AT mattaitkenhead innovationsinenvironmentalmonitoringusingmobilephonetechnologyareview
AT daviddonnelly innovationsinenvironmentalmonitoringusingmobilephonetechnologyareview
AT malcolmcoull innovationsinenvironmentalmonitoringusingmobilephonetechnologyareview
AT emilyhastings innovationsinenvironmentalmonitoringusingmobilephonetechnologyareview
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