Smart connected canines: IoT design considerations for the lab, home, and mission-critical environments

The canine-human relationship continues to grow as dogs become an increasingly critical part of our society. As reliance on dogs has increased from simple companionship, to service dogs, urban security, and national defense, the opportunities for enhanced communications between the working canine an...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in2016 IEEE 37th Sarnoff Symposium pp. 118 - 123
Main Authors Majikes, John J., Mealin, Sean, Brugarolas, Rita, Walker, Katherine, Yuschak, Sherrie, Sherman, Barbara, Bozkurt, Alper, Roberts, David L.
Format Conference Proceeding
LanguageEnglish
Published IEEE 01.09.2016
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Summary:The canine-human relationship continues to grow as dogs become an increasingly critical part of our society. As reliance on dogs has increased from simple companionship, to service dogs, urban security, and national defense, the opportunities for enhanced communications between the working canine and their handler increase. Wireless sensor networks and the Internet of Things (IoT) can extend traditional canine-human communication to integrate canines into the cyber-enabled world. This is what we call the Smart Connected Canine (SCC). Canine-computer interaction is sufficiently different from human-computer interaction so as to present some challenging research and design problems. There are physical and performance limits to what a dog will naturally tolerate. There are communications requirements for monitoring dogs, monitoring the environment, and for canine-human communications. Depending on the working environment there are different performance, security, and ergonomic considerations. This paper summarizes three example canine-human systems we presented earlier along with their Ion data characteristics and design criteria in order to explore how smart connected canines can improve our lives, the future of smart connected canines, and the requirements on IoT technologies to facilitate this future.
DOI:10.1109/SARNOF.2016.7846739