Difference between revisions of "Face-to-Face Proximity Estimation Using Bluetooth On Smartphones (Q4541)"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(Changed [en] label: Face-to-Face Proximity Estimation Using Bluetooth On Smartphones) |
(Created claim: date (P100): April 2014) |
||||||||||||||
Property / date | |||||||||||||||
+ | April 2014
| ||||||||||||||
Property / date: April 2014 / rank | |||||||||||||||
+ | Normal rank |
Revision as of 20:46, 24 April 2020
journal article from 'IEEE Transactions on Mobile Computing' published in 2014
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English |
Face-to-Face Proximity Estimation Using Bluetooth On Smartphones
|
journal article from 'IEEE Transactions on Mobile Computing' published in 2014
|
Statements
face-to-face interaction does not demand an absolute position but rather requires a determination of proximity. Face-to-face communication happens when people are close enough to have conversations in a convenient manner. the average value is equal to1.52m (range 0.7->2.2m)
0 references
Bluetooth RSSI values are much smaller than the indoor ones when the phone is in the backpack or outdoors. One of our observations is that it is possible to treat the light sensor data as an indicator of the environment.
0 references
April 2014
0 references