Safari Books Online is a digital library providing on-demand subscription access to thousands of learning resources.
You will notice that for a book called Building Wireless Sensor Networks, we spend quite a bit of time talking about actuation: outputs that make things happen in the physical world. The source of this is a deep-seated point of view that is backed up by some long-standing cognitive science.
“Thinking is for doing” is a phrase popularized by social psychologist Susan Fiske. Her point (and William James’ when he commented similarly a century earlier) is that our brains exist first and last for creating physical actions. In fact, the brain is just the midpoint of the perception-action chain. The real action starts with our sensory systems. We see, smell, and feel, then we process those sensations for the purpose of choosing and executing our next move. Sensing never happens in a vacuum for its own sake. There’s always a physical purpose. This is as true for wireless networks as it is for living organisms. The data we collect is always aimed at an action of some kind. Al....and