392 research outputs found

    Efficient calculation of sensor utility and sensor removal in wireless sensor networks for adaptive signal estimation and beamforming

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    Wireless sensor networks are often deployed over a large area of interest and therefore the quality of the sensor signals may vary significantly across the different sensors. In this case, it is useful to have a measure for the importance or the so-called "utility" of each sensor, e.g., for sensor subset selection, resource allocation or topology selection. In this paper, we consider the efficient calculation of sensor utility measures for four different signal estimation or beamforming algorithms in an adaptive context. We use the definition of sensor utility as the increase in cost (e.g., mean-squared error) when the sensor is removed from the estimation procedure. Since each possible sensor removal corresponds to a new estimation problem (involving less sensors), calculating the sensor utilities would require a continuous updating of different signal estimators (where is the number of sensors), increasing computational complexity and memory usage by a factor. However, we derive formulas to efficiently calculate all sensor utilities with hardly any increase in memory usage and computational complexity compared to the signal estimation algorithm already in place. When applied in adaptive signal estimation algorithms, this allows for on-line tracking of all the sensor utilities at almost no additional cost. Furthermore, we derive efficient formulas for sensor removal, i.e., for updating the signal estimator coefficients when a sensor is removed, e.g., due to a failure in the wireless link or when its utility is too low. We provide a complexity evaluation of the derived formulas, and demonstrate the significant reduction in computational complexity compared to straightforward implementations

    Conditional Posterior Cramer-Rao Lower Bound and Distributed Target Tracking in Sensor Networks

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    Sequential Bayesian estimation is the process of recursively estimating the state of a dynamical system observed in the presence of noise. Posterior Cramer-Rao lower bound (PCRLB) sets a performance limit onany Bayesian estimator for the given dynamical system. The PCRLBdoes not fully utilize the existing measurement information to give anindication of the mean squared error (MSE) of the estimator in the future. In many practical applications, we are more concerned with the value of the bound in the future than in the past. PCRLB is an offline bound, because it averages out the very useful measurement information, which makes it an off-line bound determined only by the system dynamical model, system measurement model and the prior knowledge of the system state at the initial time. This dissertation studies the sequential Bayesian estimation problem and then introduces the notation of conditional PCRLB, which utilizes the existing measurement information up to the current time, and sets the limit on the MSE of any Bayesian estimators at the next time step. This work has two emphases: firstly, we give the mathematically rigorous formulation of the conditional PCRLB as well as the approximate recursive version of conditional PCRLB for nonlinear, possibly non-Gaussian dynamical systems. Secondly, we apply particle filter techniques to compute the numerical values of the conditional PCRLB approximately, which overcomes the integration problems introduced by nonlinear/non-Gaussian systems. Further, we explore several possible applications of the proposed bound to find algorithms that provide improved performance. The primary problem of interest is the sensor selection problem for target tracking in sensor networks. Comparisons are also made between the performance of sensor selection algorithm based on the proposed bound and the existing approaches, such as information driven, nearest neighbor, and PCRLB with renewal strategy, to demonstrate the superior performances of the proposed approach. This dissertation also presents a bandwidth-efficient algorithm for tracking a target in sensor networks using distributed particle filters. This algorithm distributes the computation burden for target tracking over the sensor nodes. Each sensor node transmits a compressed local tracking result to the fusion center by a modified expectationmaximization (EM) algorithm to save the communication bandwidth. The fusion center incorporates the compressed tracking results to give the estimate of the target state. Finally, the target tracking problem in heterogeneous sensor networks is investigated extensively. Extended Kalman Filter and particle filter techniques are implemented and compared for tracking a maneuvering

    On the genericity properties in networked estimation: Topology design and sensor placement

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    In this paper, we consider networked estimation of linear, discrete-time dynamical systems monitored by a network of agents. In order to minimize the power requirement at the (possibly, battery-operated) agents, we require that the agents can exchange information with their neighbors only \emph{once per dynamical system time-step}; in contrast to consensus-based estimation where the agents exchange information until they reach a consensus. It can be verified that with this restriction on information exchange, measurement fusion alone results in an unbounded estimation error at every such agent that does not have an observable set of measurements in its neighborhood. To over come this challenge, state-estimate fusion has been proposed to recover the system observability. However, we show that adding state-estimate fusion may not recover observability when the system matrix is structured-rank (SS-rank) deficient. In this context, we characterize the state-estimate fusion and measurement fusion under both full SS-rank and SS-rank deficient system matrices.Comment: submitted for IEEE journal publicatio
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