3,511 research outputs found
A Survey on Multisensor Fusion and Consensus Filtering for Sensor Networks
Multisensor fusion and consensus filtering are two fascinating subjects in the research of sensor networks. In this survey, we will cover both classic results and recent advances developed in these two topics. First, we recall some important results in the development ofmultisensor fusion technology. Particularly, we pay great attention to the fusion with unknown correlations, which ubiquitously exist in most of distributed filtering problems. Next, we give a systematic review on several widely used consensus filtering approaches. Furthermore, some latest progress on multisensor fusion and consensus filtering is also presented. Finally,
conclusions are drawn and several potential future research directions are outlined.the Royal Society of the UK, the National Natural Science Foundation of China under Grants 61329301, 61374039, 61304010, 11301118, and 61573246, the Hujiang Foundation of China under Grants C14002
and D15009, the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation of Germany, and the Innovation Fund Project for Graduate Student of Shanghai under Grant JWCXSL140
A New Approach to Linear/Nonlinear Distributed Fusion Estimation Problem
Disturbance noises are always bounded in a practical system, while fusion
estimation is to best utilize multiple sensor data containing noises for the
purpose of estimating a quantity--a parameter or process. However, few results
are focused on the information fusion estimation problem under bounded noises.
In this paper, we study the distributed fusion estimation problem for linear
time-varying systems and nonlinear systems with bounded noises, where the
addressed noises do not provide any statistical information, and are unknown
but bounded. When considering linear time-varying fusion systems with bounded
noises, a new local Kalman-like estimator is designed such that the square
error of the estimator is bounded as time goes to . A novel
constructive method is proposed to find an upper bound of fusion estimation
error, then a convex optimization problem on the design of an optimal weighting
fusion criterion is established in terms of linear matrix inequalities, which
can be solved by standard software packages. Furthermore, according to the
design method of linear time-varying fusion systems, each local nonlinear
estimator is derived for nonlinear systems with bounded noises by using Taylor
series expansion, and a corresponding distributed fusion criterion is obtained
by solving a convex optimization problem. Finally, target tracking system and
localization of a mobile robot are given to show the advantages and
effectiveness of the proposed methods.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Computation-Communication Trade-offs and Sensor Selection in Real-time Estimation for Processing Networks
Recent advances in electronics are enabling substantial processing to be
performed at each node (robots, sensors) of a networked system. Local
processing enables data compression and may mitigate measurement noise, but it
is still slower compared to a central computer (it entails a larger
computational delay). However, while nodes can process the data in parallel,
the centralized computational is sequential in nature. On the other hand, if a
node sends raw data to a central computer for processing, it incurs
communication delay. This leads to a fundamental communication-computation
trade-off, where each node has to decide on the optimal amount of preprocessing
in order to maximize the network performance. We consider a network in charge
of estimating the state of a dynamical system and provide three contributions.
First, we provide a rigorous problem formulation for optimal real-time
estimation in processing networks in the presence of delays. Second, we show
that, in the case of a homogeneous network (where all sensors have the same
computation) that monitors a continuous-time scalar linear system, the optimal
amount of local preprocessing maximizing the network estimation performance can
be computed analytically. Third, we consider the realistic case of a
heterogeneous network monitoring a discrete-time multi-variate linear system
and provide algorithms to decide on suitable preprocessing at each node, and to
select a sensor subset when computational constraints make using all sensors
suboptimal. Numerical simulations show that selecting the sensors is crucial.
Moreover, we show that if the nodes apply the preprocessing policy suggested by
our algorithms, they can largely improve the network estimation performance.Comment: 15 pages, 16 figures. Accepted journal versio
On the genericity properties in networked estimation: Topology design and sensor placement
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 (-rank)
deficient.
In this context, we characterize the state-estimate fusion and measurement
fusion under both full -rank and -rank deficient system matrices.Comment: submitted for IEEE journal publicatio
Gossip Algorithms for Distributed Signal Processing
Gossip algorithms are attractive for in-network processing in sensor networks
because they do not require any specialized routing, there is no bottleneck or
single point of failure, and they are robust to unreliable wireless network
conditions. Recently, there has been a surge of activity in the computer
science, control, signal processing, and information theory communities,
developing faster and more robust gossip algorithms and deriving theoretical
performance guarantees. This article presents an overview of recent work in the
area. We describe convergence rate results, which are related to the number of
transmitted messages and thus the amount of energy consumed in the network for
gossiping. We discuss issues related to gossiping over wireless links,
including the effects of quantization and noise, and we illustrate the use of
gossip algorithms for canonical signal processing tasks including distributed
estimation, source localization, and compression.Comment: Submitted to Proceedings of the IEEE, 29 page
Covariance-Based Estimation for Clustered Sensor Networks Subject to Random Deception Attacks
In this paper, a cluster-based approach is used to address the distributed fusion estimation
problem (filtering and fixed-point smoothing) for discrete-time stochastic signals in the presence of
random deception attacks. At each sampling time, measured outputs of the signal are provided by
a networked system, whose sensors are grouped into clusters. Each cluster is connected to a local
processor which gathers the measured outputs of its sensors and, in turn, the local processors of all
clusters are connected with a global fusion center. The proposed cluster-based fusion estimation
structure involves two stages. First, every single sensor in a cluster transmits its observations to the
corresponding local processor, where least-squares local estimators are designed by an innovation
approach. During this transmission, deception attacks to the sensor measurements may be randomly
launched by an adversary, with known probabilities of success that may be different at each sensor.
In the second stage, the local estimators are sent to the fusion center, where they are combined
to generate the proposed fusion estimators. The covariance-based design of the distributed fusion
filtering and fixed-point smoothing algorithms does not require full knowledge of the signal evolution
model, but only the first and second order moments of the processes involved in the observation
model. Simulations are provided to illustrate the theoretical results and analyze the effect of the
attack success probability on the estimation performance.This research is supported by Ministerio de Economía, Industria y Competitividad, Agencia Estatal de
Investigación and Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional FEDER (grant no. MTM2017-84199-P)
Distributed Constrained Recursive Nonlinear Least-Squares Estimation: Algorithms and Asymptotics
This paper focuses on the problem of recursive nonlinear least squares
parameter estimation in multi-agent networks, in which the individual agents
observe sequentially over time an independent and identically distributed
(i.i.d.) time-series consisting of a nonlinear function of the true but unknown
parameter corrupted by noise. A distributed recursive estimator of the
\emph{consensus} + \emph{innovations} type, namely , is
proposed, in which the agents update their parameter estimates at each
observation sampling epoch in a collaborative way by simultaneously processing
the latest locally sensed information~(\emph{innovations}) and the parameter
estimates from other agents~(\emph{consensus}) in the local neighborhood
conforming to a pre-specified inter-agent communication topology. Under rather
weak conditions on the connectivity of the inter-agent communication and a
\emph{global observability} criterion, it is shown that at every network agent,
the proposed algorithm leads to consistent parameter estimates. Furthermore,
under standard smoothness assumptions on the local observation functions, the
distributed estimator is shown to yield order-optimal convergence rates, i.e.,
as far as the order of pathwise convergence is concerned, the local parameter
estimates at each agent are as good as the optimal centralized nonlinear least
squares estimator which would require access to all the observations across all
the agents at all times. In order to benchmark the performance of the proposed
distributed estimator with that of the centralized nonlinear
least squares estimator, the asymptotic normality of the estimate sequence is
established and the asymptotic covariance of the distributed estimator is
evaluated. Finally, simulation results are presented which illustrate and
verify the analytical findings.Comment: 28 pages. Initial Submission: Feb. 2016, Revised: July 2016,
Accepted: September 2016, To appear in IEEE Transactions on Signal and
Information Processing over Networks: Special Issue on Inference and Learning
over Network
Event-based multi-objective filtering for multi-rate time-varying systems with random sensor saturation
summary:This paper focuses on the multi-objective filtering of multirate time-varying systems with random sensor saturations, where both the variance-constrained index and the index are employed to evaluate the filtering performance. According to address issues, the high-frequency period of the internal state of the system is nondestructively converted to the low-frequency period, which determined by the measurement devices. Then the saturated output of multiple sensors is modeled as a sector bounded nonlinearity. At the same time, in order to reduce the communication frequency between sensors and filters, a communication scheduling rule is designed by the utilization of an event-triggered mechanism. By means of random analysis technology, the sufficient conditions are given to guarantee the preset performance and variance constraint performance indexes of the system, and then the solution of the desired filter is obtained by using linear matrix inequalities. Finally, the validity and effectiveness of the proposed filter scheme are verified by numerical simulation
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