1,737 research outputs found

    Recent Advances in Indoor Localization Systems and Technologies

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    Despite the enormous technical progress seen in the past few years, the maturity of indoor localization technologies has not yet reached the level of GNSS solutions. The 23 selected papers in this book present the recent advances and new developments in indoor localization systems and technologies, propose novel or improved methods with increased performance, provide insight into various aspects of quality control, and also introduce some unorthodox positioning methods

    A Review of Indoor Millimeter Wave Device-based Localization and Device-free Sensing Technologies and Applications

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    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

    A review of RFID based solutions for indoor localization and location-based classification of tags

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    Wireless communication systems are very used for indoor localization of items. In particular, two main application field can be identified. The former relates to detection or localization of static items. The latter relates to real-time tracking of moving objects, whose movements can be reconstructed over identified timespans. Among the adopted technologies, Radio-Frequency IDentification (RFID), especially if based on cheap passive RFID tags, stands out for its affordability and reasonable efficiency. This aspect makes RFID suitable for both the above-mentioned applications, especially when a large number of objects need to be tagged. The reason lies in a suitable trade-off between low cost for implementing the position sensing system, and its precision and accuracy. However, RFID-based solutions suffer for limited reading range and lower accuracy. Solutions have been proposed by academia and industry. However, a structured analysis of developed solutions, useful for further implementations, is missing. The purpose of this paper is to highlight and review the recently proposed solutions for indoor localization making use of RFID passive tags. The paper focuses on both precise and qualitative location of objects. The form relates to (i) the correct position of tags, namely mapping their right position in a 2D or 3D environment. The latter relates to the classification of tags, namely the identification of the area where the tag is regardless its specific position

    Intelligent strategies for mobile robotics in laboratory automation

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    In this thesis a new intelligent framework is presented for the mobile robots in laboratory automation, which includes: a new multi-floor indoor navigation method is presented and an intelligent multi-floor path planning is proposed; a new signal filtering method is presented for the robots to forecast their indoor coordinates; a new human feature based strategy is proposed for the robot-human smart collision avoidance; a new robot power forecasting method is proposed to decide a distributed transportation task; a new blind approach is presented for the arm manipulations for the robots

    Conceptual spatial representations for indoor mobile robots

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    We present an approach for creating conceptual representations of human-made indoor environments using mobile robots. The concepts refer to spatial and functional properties of typical indoor environments. Following ļ¬ndings in cognitive psychology, our model is composed of layers representing maps at diļ¬€erent levels of abstraction. The complete system is integrated in a mobile robot endowed with laser and vision sensors for place and object recognition. The system also incorporates a linguistic framework that actively supports the map acquisition process, and which is used for situated dialogue. Finally, we discuss the capabilities of the integrated system

    Design Framework of UAV-Based Environment Sensing, Localization, and Imaging System

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    In this dissertation research, we develop a framework for designing an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle or UAV-based environment sensing, localization, and imaging system for challenging environments with no GPS signals and low visibility. The UAV system relies on the various sensors that it carries to conduct accurate sensing and localization of the objects in an environment, and further to reconstruct the 3D shapes of those objects. The system can be very useful when exploring an unknown or dangerous environment, e.g., a disaster site, which is not convenient or not accessible for humans. In addition, the system can be used for monitoring and object tracking in a large scale environment, e.g., a smart manufacturing factory, for the purposes of workplace management/safety, and maintaining optimal system performance/productivity. In our framework, the UAV system is comprised of two subsystems: a sensing and localization subsystem; and a mmWave radar-based 3D object reconstruction subsystem. The first subsystem is referred to as LIDAUS (Localization of IoT Device via Anchor UAV SLAM), which is an infrastructure-free, multi-stage SLAM (Simultaneous Localization and Mapping) system that utilizes a UAV to accurately localize and track IoT devices in a space with weak or no GPS signals. The rapidly increasing deployment of Internet of Things (IoT) around the world is changing many aspects of our society. IoT devices can be deployed in various places for different purposes, e.g., in a manufacturing site or a large warehouse, and they can be displaced over time due to human activities, or manufacturing processes. Usually in an indoor environment, the lack of GPS signals and infrastructure support makes most existing indoor localization systems not practical when localizing a large number of wireless IoT devices. In addition, safety concerns, access restriction, and simply the huge amount of IoT devices make it not practical for humans to manually localize and track IoT devices. Our LIDAUS is developed to address these problems. The UAV in our LIDAUS system conducts multi-stage 3D SLAM trips to localize devices based only on Received Signal Strength Indicator (RSSI), the most widely available measurement of the signals of almost all commodity IoT devices. Our simulations and experiments of Bluetooth IoT devices demonstrate that our system LIDAUS can achieve high localization accuracy based only on RSSIs of commodity IoT devices. Build on the first subsystem, we further develop the second subsystem for environment reconstruction and imaging via mmWave radar and deep learning. This subsystem is referred to as 3DRIMR/R2P (3D Reconstruction and Imaging via mmWave Radar/Radar to Point Cloud). It enables an exploring UAV to fly within an environment and collect mmWave radar data by scanning various objects in the environment. Taking advantage of the accurate locations given by the first subsystem, the UAV can scan an object from different viewpoints. Then based on radar data only, the UAV can reconstruct the 3D shapes of the objects in the space. mmWave radar has been shown as an effective sensing technique in low visibility, smoke, dusty, and dense fog environment. However, tapping the potential of radar sensing to reconstruct 3D object shapes remains a great challenge, due to the characteristics of radar data such as sparsity, low resolution, specularity, large noise, and multi-path induced shadow reflections and artifacts. Hence, it is challenging to reconstruct 3D object shapes based on the raw sparse and low-resolution mmWave radar signals. To address the challenges, our second subsystem utilizes deep learning models to extract features from sparse raw mmWave radar intensity data, and reconstructs 3D shapes of objects in the format of dense and detailed point cloud. We first develop a deep learning model to reconstruct a single objectā€™s 3D shape. The model first converts mmWave radar data to depth images, and then reconstructs an objectā€™s 3D shape in point cloud format. Our experiments demonstrate the significant performance improvement of our system over the popular existing methods such as PointNet, PointNet++ and PCN. Then we further explore the feasibility of utilizing a mmWave radar sensor installed on a UAV to reconstruct the 3D shapes of multiple objects in a space. We evaluate two different models. Model 1 is 3DRIMR/R2P model, and Model 2 is formed by adding a segmentation stage in the processing pipeline of Model 1. Our experiments demonstrate that both models are promising in solving the multiple object reconstruction problem. We also show that Model 2, despite producing denser and smoother point clouds, can lead to higher reconstruction loss or even missing objects. In addition, we find that both models are robust to the highly noisy radar data obtained by unstable Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) operation due to the instability or vibration of a small UAV hovering at its intended scanning point. Our research shows a promising direction of applying mmWave radar sensing in 3D object reconstruction
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