Interconnecting sensors and people to improve the knowledge and sustainable management in rural and alpine environment: the CIRCE project
Abstract
Publication Date:
2016
abstract:
Environmental sensor monitoring is continuously developing, both in terms of quantity (i.e. measurement sites),
and quality (i.e. technological innovation). Environmental monitoring is carried out by either public or private
entities for their own specific purposes, such as scientific research, civil protection, support to industrial and agricultural
activities, services for citizens, security, education, and information. However, the acquired dataset could
be cross-appealing, hence, being interesting for purposes that diverted from their main intended use.
The CIRCE project (Cooperative Internet-of-Data Rural-alpine Community Environment) aimed to gather, manage,
use and distribute data obtained from sensors and from people, in a multipurpose approach. The CIRCE project
was selected within a call for tender launched by Piedmont Region (in collaboration with CSI Piemonte) in order to
improve the digital ecosystem represented by YUCCA, an open source platform oriented to the acquisition, sharing
and reuse of data resulting both from real-time and on-demand applications. The partnership of the CIRCE project
was made by scientific research bodies (IMAMOTER-CNR, IRPI-CNR, DIST) together with SMEs involved in
environmental monitoring and ICT sectors (namely: 3a srl, EnviCons srl, Impresa Verde Cuneo srl, and NetValue
srl).
Within the project a shared network of agro-meteo-hydrological sensors has been created. Then a platform and its
interface for collection, management and distribution of data has been developed.
The CIRCE network is currently constituted by a total amount of 171 sensors remotely connected and originally
belonging to different networks. They are settled-up in order to monitor and investigate agro-meteo-hydrological
processes in different rural and mountain areas of Piedmont Region (NW-Italy), including some very sensitive
locations, but difficult to access. Each sensor network differs from each other, in terms of purpose of monitoring,
monitored parameters, instrumentation, system architecture, data acquisition and communication processes.
In addition to real-time data, the CIRCE database includes many historical datasets, which were uniformed to the
adopted database architecture. Such datasets were collected before the implementation of the project both from the
connected sensors, and from sensors no longer active.
In order to attempt to reduce the gap between the research community and end users, specific APP for smartphones
and tablets were created. Such tools facilitate the access and the enrichment of the CIRCE database both for the
hydrological section (APP IDRO) than for the agro-meteorological section (APP AGRO). Non-specialists may
participate in enrichment of the sensor punctual data with sending qualitative and quantitative information about
the observed processes (e.g. watercourse levels, erosion processes, presence of pathogens, damage pictures, etc.).
The territorial investigation and the data acquisition also involved groups of citizens (namely farmers, technician
and volunteers), that were engaged in creating and testing the informatics tools, according with the "Living Lab"
approach.
Finally, the CIRCE platform was interfaced with the YUCCA platform, allowing an open access to the CIRCE
dataset and its integration in the SmartDataNet system of the Regione Piemonte public administration.
The CIRCE project was funded by EU FESR, by Italian Government and Regione Piemonte within the programme
Regione Piemonte POR/FESR 2007-2013.
Iris type:
01.05 Abstract in rivista
Keywords:
environmental monitoring; sensor network; Living Lab; citizen science
List of contributors:
Coviello, Velio; Bagagiolo, Giorgia; Ferraris, Stefano; Arattano, Massimo; Cavallo, Eugenio; Turconi, Laura; Biddoccu, Marcella
Published in: