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Dive into the research topics where Christopher Crossman is active.

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Featured researches published by Christopher Crossman.


IEEE Pervasive Computing | 2007

Transforming Agriculture through Pervasive Wireless Sensor Networks

Tim Wark; Peter Corke; Pavan Sikka; Lasse Klingbeil; Ying Guo; Christopher Crossman; Philip Valencia; Dave Swain; Greg Bishop-Hurley

A large-scale, outdoor pervasive computing system uses static and animal-borne nodes to measure the state of a complex system comprising climate, soil, pasture, and animals. Agriculture faces many challenges, such as climate change, water shortages, labor shortages due to an aging urbanized population, and increased societal concern about issues such as animal welfare, food safety, and environmental impact. Humanity depends on agriculture and water for survival, so optimal, profitable, and sustainable use of our land and water resources is critical.


information processing in sensor networks | 2006

Wireless ad hoc sensor and actuator networks on the farm

Pavan Sikka; Peter Corke; Philip Valencia; Christopher Crossman; Dave Swain; Greg Bishop-Hurley

Agriculture accounts for a significant portion of the GDP in most developed countries. However, managing farms, particularly large-scale extensive farming systems, is hindered by lack of data and increasing shortage of labour. We have deployed a large heterogeneous sensor network on a working farm to explore sensor network applications that can address some of the issues identified above. Our network is solar powered and has been running for over 6 months. The current deployment consists of over 40 moisture sensors that provide soil moisture profiles at varying depths, weight sensors to compute the amount of food and water consumed by animals, electronic tag readers, up to 40 sensors that can be used to track animal movement (consisting of GPS, compass and accelerometers), and 20 sensor/actuators that can be used to apply different stimuli (audio, vibration and mild electric shock) to the animal. The static part of the network is designed for 24/7 operation and is linked to the Internet via a dedicated high-gain radio link, also solar powered. The initial goals of the deployment are to provide a testbed for sensor network research in programmability and data handling while also being a vital tool for scientists to study animal behavior. Our longer term aim is to create a management system that completely transforms the way farms are managed


information processing in sensor networks | 2007

The design and evaluation of a mobile sensor/actuator network for autonomous animal control

Tim Wark; Christopher Crossman; Wen Hu; Ying Guo; Philip Valencia; Pavan Sikka; Peter Corke; Caroline Lee; John M. Henshall; Kishore Prayaga; Julian O'Grady; Matt Reed; Andrew D. Fisher

This paper investigates a mobile, wireless sensor/actuator network application for use in the cattle breeding industry. Our goal is to prevent fighting between bulls in on-farm breeding paddocks by autonomously applying appropriate stimuli when one bull approaches another bull. This is an important application because fighting between high-value animals such as bulls during breeding seasons causes significant financial loss to producers. Furthermore, there are significant challenges in this type of application because it requires dynamic animal state estimation, real-time actuation and efficient mobile wireless transmissions. We designed and implemented an animal state estimation algorithm based on a state-machine mechanism for each animal. Autonomous actuation is performed based on the estimated states of an animal relative to other animals. A simple, yet effective, wireless communication model has been proposed and implemented to achieve high delivery rates in mobile environments. We evaluated the performance of our design by both simulations and field experiments, which demonstrated the effectiveness of our autonomous animal control system.


information processing in sensor networks | 2013

Camazotz: multimodal activity-based GPS sampling

Raja Jurdak; Philipp Sommer; Branislav Kusy; Navinda Kottege; Christopher Crossman; Adam McKeown; David A. Westcott

Long-term outdoor localisation with battery-powered devices remains an unsolved challenge, mainly due to the high energy consumption of GPS modules. The use of inertial sensors and short-range radio can reduce reliance on GPS to prolong the operational lifetime of tracking devices, but they only provide coarse-grained control over GPS activity. In this paper, we introduce our feature-rich lightweight Camazotz platform as an enabler of Multimodal Activity-based Localisation (MAL), which detects activities of interest by combining multiple sensor streams for fine-grained control of GPS sampling times. Using the case study of long-term flying fox tracking, we characterise the tracking, connectivity, energy, and activity recognition performance of our module under both static and 3-D mobile scenarios. We use Camazotz to collect empirical flying fox data and illustrate the utility of individual and composite sensor modalities in classifying activity. We evaluate MAL for flying foxes through simulations based on retrospective empirical data. The results show that multimodal activity-based localisation reduces the power consumption over periodic GPS and single sensor-triggered GPS by up to 77% and 14% respectively, and provides a richer event type dissociation for fine-grained control of GPS sampling.


ACM Transactions on Sensor Networks | 2013

Energy-efficient localization: GPS duty cycling with radio ranging

Raja Jurdak; Peter Corke; Alban Cotillon; Dhinesh Dharman; Christopher Crossman; Guillaume Salagnac

GPS is a commonly used and convenient technology for determining absolute position in outdoor environments, but its high power consumption leads to rapid battery depletion in mobile devices. An obvious solution is to duty cycle the GPS module, which prolongs the device lifetime at the cost of increased position uncertainty while the GPS is off. This article addresses the trade-off between energy consumption and localization performance in a mobile sensor network application. The focus is on augmenting GPS location with more energy-efficient location sensors to bound position estimate uncertainty while GPS is off. Empirical GPS and radio contact data from a large-scale animal tracking deployment is used to model node mobility, radio performance, and GPS. Because GPS takes a considerable, and variable, time after powering up before it delivers a good position measurement, we model the GPS behavior through empirical measurements of two GPS modules. These models are then used to explore duty cycling strategies for maintaining position uncertainty within specified bounds. We then explore the benefits of using short-range radio contact logging alongside GPS as an energy-inexpensive means of lowering uncertainty while the GPS is off, and we propose strategies that use RSSI ranging and GPS back-offs to further reduce energy consumption. Results show that our combined strategies can cut node energy consumption by one third while still meeting application-specific positioning criteria.


international conference on embedded networked sensor systems | 2007

A model-based routing protocol for a mobile, delay tolerant network

Tim Wark; Wen Hu; Pavan Sikka; Lasse Klingbeil; Peter Corke; Christopher Crossman; Greg Bishop-Hurley

This short-paper presents the design and experimental validation of model-based, mobile routing protocol for a delay tolerant network (DTN), where herds of animals are utilised as message ferries. We develop a novel routing protocol that utilises knowledge of the predicted behaviour of each ferry in order to choose optimal ferries for carrying messages from source to sink nodes, as well as minimise routing overhead of the network via adaptive beaconing based on current behaviour.


international conference on embedded networked sensor systems | 2008

A sensor network for compression and streaming of GPS trajectory data

Tim Wark; Christopher Crossman; Philip Valencia; Peter Corke; Greg Bishop-Hurley; Dave Swain

We present the design and deployment results for PosNet - a large-scale, long-duration sensor network that gathers summary position and status information from mobile nodes. The mobile nodes have a fixed-sized memory buffer to which position data is added at a constant rate, and from which data is downloaded at a non-constant rate. We have developed a novel algorithm that performs online summarization of position data within the buffer, where the algorithm naturally accommodates data input and output rate mismatch, and also provides a delay-tolerant approach to data transport. The algorithm has been extensively tested in a large-scale long-duration cattle monitoring and control application.


Computers and Electronics in Agriculture | 2007

Virtual fencing applications: Implementing and testing an automated cattle control system

Greg Bishop-Hurley; Dave Swain; Dean M. Anderson; Pavan Sikka; Christopher Crossman; Peter Corke


IEEE Pervasive Computing | 2009

Sensor and Actuator Networks: Protecting Environmentally Sensitive Areas

Tim Wark; Dave Swain; Christopher Crossman; Philip Valencia; Greg Bishop-Hurley; R.N. Handcock


Computers and Electronics in Agriculture | 2015

Behavioral classification of data from collars containing motion sensors in grazing cattle

L. A. González; Greg Bishop-Hurley; R.N. Handcock; Christopher Crossman

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Philip Valencia

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Tim Wark

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Greg Bishop-Hurley

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Peter Corke

Queensland University of Technology

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Dave Swain

Central Queensland University

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Pavan Sikka

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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R.N. Handcock

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Andre Zerger

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Caroline Lee

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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David Gobbett

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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