16 research outputs found
Low-effort place recognition with WiFi fingerprints using deep learning
Using WiFi signals for indoor localization is the main localization modality
of the existing personal indoor localization systems operating on mobile
devices. WiFi fingerprinting is also used for mobile robots, as WiFi signals
are usually available indoors and can provide rough initial position estimate
or can be used together with other positioning systems. Currently, the best
solutions rely on filtering, manual data analysis, and time-consuming parameter
tuning to achieve reliable and accurate localization. In this work, we propose
to use deep neural networks to significantly lower the work-force burden of the
localization system design, while still achieving satisfactory results.
Assuming the state-of-the-art hierarchical approach, we employ the DNN system
for building/floor classification. We show that stacked autoencoders allow to
efficiently reduce the feature space in order to achieve robust and precise
classification. The proposed architecture is verified on the publicly available
UJIIndoorLoc dataset and the results are compared with other solutions
Hybrid Building/Floor Classification and Location Coordinates Regression Using A Single-Input and Multi-Output Deep Neural Network for Large-Scale Indoor Localization Based on Wi-Fi Fingerprinting
In this paper, we propose hybrid building/floor classification and
floor-level two-dimensional location coordinates regression using a
single-input and multi-output (SIMO) deep neural network (DNN) for large-scale
indoor localization based on Wi-Fi fingerprinting. The proposed scheme exploits
the different nature of the estimation of building/floor and floor-level
location coordinates and uses a different estimation framework for each task
with a dedicated output and hidden layers enabled by SIMO DNN architecture. We
carry out preliminary evaluation of the performance of the hybrid floor
classification and floor-level two-dimensional location coordinates regression
using new Wi-Fi crowdsourced fingerprinting datasets provided by Tampere
University of Technology (TUT), Finland, covering a single building with five
floors. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed SIMO-DNN-based
hybrid classification/regression scheme outperforms existing schemes in terms
of both floor detection rate and mean positioning errors.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 3rd International Workshop on GPU Computing and
AI (GCA'18
A Scalable Deep Neural Network Architecture for Multi-Building and Multi-Floor Indoor Localization Based on Wi-Fi Fingerprinting
One of the key technologies for future large-scale location-aware services
covering a complex of multi-story buildings --- e.g., a big shopping mall and a
university campus --- is a scalable indoor localization technique. In this
paper, we report the current status of our investigation on the use of deep
neural networks (DNNs) for scalable building/floor classification and
floor-level position estimation based on Wi-Fi fingerprinting. Exploiting the
hierarchical nature of the building/floor estimation and floor-level
coordinates estimation of a location, we propose a new DNN architecture
consisting of a stacked autoencoder for the reduction of feature space
dimension and a feed-forward classifier for multi-label classification of
building/floor/location, on which the multi-building and multi-floor indoor
localization system based on Wi-Fi fingerprinting is built. Experimental
results for the performance of building/floor estimation and floor-level
coordinates estimation of a given location demonstrate the feasibility of the
proposed DNN-based indoor localization system, which can provide near
state-of-the-art performance using a single DNN, for the implementation with
lower complexity and energy consumption at mobile devices.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
On the Relation Between Mobile Encounters and Web Traffic Patterns: A Data-driven Study
Mobility and network traffic have been traditionally studied separately.
Their interaction is vital for generations of future mobile services and
effective caching, but has not been studied in depth with real-world big data.
In this paper, we characterize mobility encounters and study the correlation
between encounters and web traffic profiles using large-scale datasets (30TB in
size) of WiFi and NetFlow traces. The analysis quantifies these correlations
for the first time, across spatio-temporal dimensions, for device types grouped
into on-the-go Flutes and sit-to-use Cellos. The results consistently show a
clear relation between mobility encounters and traffic across different
buildings over multiple days, with encountered pairs showing higher traffic
similarity than non-encountered pairs, and long encounters being associated
with the highest similarity. We also investigate the feasibility of learning
encounters through web traffic profiles, with implications for dissemination
protocols, and contact tracing. This provides a compelling case to integrate
both mobility and web traffic dimensions in future models, not only at an
individual level, but also at pairwise and collective levels. We have released
samples of code and data used in this study on GitHub, to support
reproducibility and encourage further research
(https://github.com/BabakAp/encounter-traffic).Comment: Technical report with details for conference paper at MSWiM 2018, v3
adds GitHub lin
Survey on Wireless Indoor Positioning Systems
Indoor positioning has finally testified a rise in interest, thanks to the big selection of services it is provided, and ubiquitous connectivity. There are currently many systems that can locate a person, be it wireless or by mobile phone and the most common systems in outdoor environments is the GPS, the most common in indoor environments is Wi-Fi positioning technique positioning. The improvement of positioning systems in indoor environments is desirable in many areas as it provides important facilities and services, such as airports, universities, factories, hospitals, and shopping malls. This paper provides an overview of the existing methods based on wireless indoor positioning technique. We focus in this survey on the strengths of these systems mentioned in the literature discordant with the present surveys; we also assess to additionally measure various systems from the scene of energy efficiency, price, and following accuracy instead of comparing the technologies, we also to additionally discuss residual challenges to correct indoor positioning