20,729 research outputs found
Embracing Localization Inaccuracy: A Case Study
In recent years, indoor localization has become a hot research topic with some sophisticated solutions reaching accuracy on the order of ten centimeters. While certain classes of applications can justify the corresponding costs that come with these solutions, a wealth of applications have requirements that can be met at much lower cost by accepting lower accuracy. This paper explores one specific application for monitoring patients in a nursing home, showing that sufficient accuracy can be achieved with a carefully designed deployment of low-cost wireless sensor network nodes in combination with a simple RSSI-based localization technique. Notably our solution uses a single radio sample per period, a number that is much lower than similar approaches. This greatly eases the power burden of the nodes, resulting in a significant lifetime increase. This paper evaluates a concrete deployment from summer 2012 composed of fixed anchor motes throughout one floor of a nursing home and mobile units carried by patients. We show how two localization algorithms perform and demonstrate a clear improvement by following a set of simple guidelines to tune the anchor node placement. We show both quantitatively and qualitatively that the results meet the functional and non-functional system requirements
Enhanced indoor location tracking through body shadowing compensation
This paper presents a radio frequency (RF)-based location tracking system that improves its performance by eliminating the shadowing caused by the human body of the user being tracked. The presence of such a user will influence the RF signal paths between a body-worn node and the receiving nodes. This influence will vary with the user's location and orientation and, as a result, will deteriorate the performance regarding location tracking. By using multiple mobile nodes, placed on different parts of a human body, we exploit the fact that the combination of multiple measured signal strengths will show less variation caused by the user's body. Another method is to compensate explicitly for the influence of the body by using the user's orientation toward the fixed infrastructure nodes. Both approaches can be independently combined and reduce the influence caused by body shadowing, hereby improving the tracking accuracy. The overall system performance is extensively verified on a building-wide testbed for sensor experiments. The results show a significant improvement in tracking accuracy. The total improvement in mean accuracy is 38.1% when using three mobile nodes instead of one and simultaneously compensating for the user's orientation
Locating sensors with fuzzy logic algorithms
In a system formed by hundreds of sensors deployed
in a huge area it is important to know the position where every
sensor is.
This information can be obtained using several methods.
However, if the number of sensors is high and the deployment
is based on ad-hoc manner, some auto-locating techniques must
be implemented.
In this paper we describe a novel algorithm based on fuzzy
logic with the objective of estimating the location of sensors
according to the knowledge of the position of some reference
nodes.
This algorithm, called LIS (Localization based on Intelligent
Sensors) is executed distributively along a wireless sensor network
formed by hundreds of nodes, covering a huge area.
The evaluation of LIS is led by simulation tests. The result
obtained shows that LIS is a promising method that can easily
solve the problem of knowing where the sensors are located.Junta de Andalucía P07-TIC-0247
Localization for Anchoritic Sensor Networks
We introduce a class of anchoritic sensor networks, where communications
between sensor nodes is undesirable or infeasible, e.g., due to harsh
environment, energy constraints, or security considerations
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