168 research outputs found
A survey of deep learning approaches for WiFi-based indoor positioning
One of the most popular approaches for indoor positioning is WiFi fingerprinting, which has been intrinsically tackled as a traditional machine learning problem since the beginning, to achieve a few metres of accuracy on average. In recent years, deep learning has emerged as an alternative approach, with a large number of publications reporting sub-metre positioning accuracy. Therefore, this survey presents a timely, comprehensive review of the most interesting deep learning methods being used for WiFi fingerprinting. In doing so, we aim to identify the most efficient neural networks, under a variety of positioning evaluation metrics for different readers. We will demonstrate that despite the new emerging WiFi signal measures (i.e. CSI and RTT), RSS produces competitive performances under deep learning. We will also show that simple neural networks outperform more complex ones in certain environments
Group-In: Group Inference from Wireless Traces of Mobile Devices
This paper proposes Group-In, a wireless scanning system to detect static or
mobile people groups in indoor or outdoor environments. Group-In collects only
wireless traces from the Bluetooth-enabled mobile devices for group inference.
The key problem addressed in this work is to detect not only static groups but
also moving groups with a multi-phased approach based only noisy wireless
Received Signal Strength Indicator (RSSIs) observed by multiple wireless
scanners without localization support. We propose new centralized and
decentralized schemes to process the sparse and noisy wireless data, and
leverage graph-based clustering techniques for group detection from short-term
and long-term aspects. Group-In provides two outcomes: 1) group detection in
short time intervals such as two minutes and 2) long-term linkages such as a
month. To verify the performance, we conduct two experimental studies. One
consists of 27 controlled scenarios in the lab environments. The other is a
real-world scenario where we place Bluetooth scanners in an office environment,
and employees carry beacons for more than one month. Both the controlled and
real-world experiments result in high accuracy group detection in short time
intervals and sampling liberties in terms of the Jaccard index and pairwise
similarity coefficient.Comment: This work has been funded by the EU Horizon 2020 Programme under
Grant Agreements No. 731993 AUTOPILOT and No.871249 LOCUS projects. The
content of this paper does not reflect the official opinion of the EU.
Responsibility for the information and views expressed therein lies entirely
with the authors. Proc. of ACM/IEEE IPSN'20, 202
RF Fingerprinting Unmanned Aerial Vehicles
As unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) continue to become more readily available, their use in civil, military, and commercial applications is growing significantly. From aerial surveillance to search-and-rescue to package delivery the use cases of UAVs are accelerating. This accelerating popularity gives rise to numerous attack possibilities for example impersonation attacks in drone-based delivery, in a UAV swarm, etc. In order to ensure drone security, in this project we propose an authentication system based on RF fingerprinting. Specifically, we extract and use the device-specific hardware impairments embedded in the transmitted RF signal to separate the identity of each UAV. To achieve this goal, AlexNet with the data augmentation technique was employed
A Review of Indoor Millimeter Wave Device-based Localization and Device-free Sensing Technologies and Applications
The commercial availability of low-cost millimeter wave (mmWave)
communication and radar devices is starting to improve the penetration of such
technologies in consumer markets, paving the way for large-scale and dense
deployments in fifth-generation (5G)-and-beyond as well as 6G networks. At the
same time, pervasive mmWave access will enable device localization and
device-free sensing with unprecedented accuracy, especially with respect to
sub-6 GHz commercial-grade devices. This paper surveys the state of the art in
device-based localization and device-free sensing using mmWave communication
and radar devices, with a focus on indoor deployments. We first overview key
concepts about mmWave signal propagation and system design. Then, we provide a
detailed account of approaches and algorithms for localization and sensing
enabled by mmWaves. We consider several dimensions in our analysis, including
the main objectives, techniques, and performance of each work, whether each
research reached some degree of implementation, and which hardware platforms
were used for this purpose. We conclude by discussing that better algorithms
for consumer-grade devices, data fusion methods for dense deployments, as well
as an educated application of machine learning methods are promising, relevant
and timely research directions.Comment: 43 pages, 13 figures. Accepted in IEEE Communications Surveys &
Tutorials (IEEE COMST
SiMWiSense: Simultaneous Multi-Subject Activity Classification Through Wi-Fi Signals
Recent advances in Wi-Fi sensing have ushered in a plethora of pervasive
applications in home surveillance, remote healthcare, road safety, and home
entertainment, among others. Most of the existing works are limited to the
activity classification of a single human subject at a given time. Conversely,
a more realistic scenario is to achieve simultaneous, multi-subject activity
classification. The first key challenge in that context is that the number of
classes grows exponentially with the number of subjects and activities.
Moreover, it is known that Wi-Fi sensing systems struggle to adapt to new
environments and subjects. To address both issues, we propose SiMWiSense, the
first framework for simultaneous multi-subject activity classification based on
Wi-Fi that generalizes to multiple environments and subjects. We address the
scalability issue by using the Channel State Information (CSI) computed from
the device positioned closest to the subject. We experimentally prove this
intuition by confirming that the best accuracy is experienced when the CSI
computed by the transceiver positioned closest to the subject is used for
classification. To address the generalization issue, we develop a brand-new
few-shot learning algorithm named Feature Reusable Embedding Learning (FREL).
Through an extensive data collection campaign in 3 different environments and 3
subjects performing 20 different activities simultaneously, we demonstrate that
SiMWiSense achieves classification accuracy of up to 97%, while FREL improves
the accuracy by 85% in comparison to a traditional Convolutional Neural Network
(CNN) and up to 20% when compared to the state-of-the-art few-shot embedding
learning (FSEL), by using only 15 seconds of additional data for each class.
For reproducibility purposes, we share our 1TB dataset and code repository.Comment: This work has been accepted for publication in IEEE WoWMoM 202
Indoor navigation systems based on data mining techniques in internet of things: a survey
© 2018, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature. Internet of Things (IoT) is turning into an essential part of daily life, and numerous IoT-based scenarios will be seen in future of modern cities ranging from small indoor situations to huge outdoor environments. In this era, navigation continues to be a crucial element in both outdoor and indoor environments, and many solutions have been provided in both cases. On the other side, recent smart objects have produced a substantial amount of various data which demands sophisticated data mining solutions to cope with them. This paper presents a detailed review of previous studies on using data mining techniques in indoor navigation systems for the loT scenarios. We aim to understand what type of navigation problems exist in different IoT scenarios with a focus on indoor environments and later on we investigate how data mining solutions can provide solutions on those challenges
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