2,813 research outputs found
Doctor of Philosophy
dissertationLocation information of people is valuable for many applications including logistics, healthcare, security and smart facilities. This dissertation focuses on localization of people in wireless sensor networks using radio frequency (RF) signals, speci cally received signal strength (RSS) measurements. A static sensor network can make RSS measurements of the signal from a transmitting badge that a person wears in order to locate the badge. We call this kind of localization method radio device localization. Since the human body causes RSS changes between pairwise sensor nodes of a static network, we can also use RSS measurements from pairwise nodes of a network to locate people, even if they are not carrying any radio device. We call this device-free localization (DFL). The rst contribution of this dissertation is to radio device localization. The human body has a major e ect on the antenna gain pattern of the transmitting badge that the person is wearing, however, existing r
Device Free Localisation Techniques in Indoor Environments
The location estimation of a target for a long period was performed only by device based localisation technique which is difficult in applications where target especially human is non-cooperative. A target was detected by equipping a device using global positioning systems, radio frequency systems, ultrasonic frequency systems, etc. Device free localisation (DFL) is an upcoming technology in automated localisation in which target need not equip any device for identifying its position by the user. For achieving this objective, the wireless sensor network is a better choice due to its growing popularity. This paper describes the possible categorisation of recently developed DFL techniques using wireless sensor network. The scope of each category of techniques is analysed by comparing their potential benefits and drawbacks. Finally, future scope and research directions in this field are also summarised
Likelihood inference for particle location in fluorescence microscopy
We introduce a procedure to automatically count and locate the fluorescent
particles in a microscopy image. Our procedure employs an approximate
likelihood estimator derived from a Poisson random field model for photon
emission. Estimates of standard errors are generated for each image along with
the parameter estimates, and the number of particles in the image is determined
using an information criterion and likelihood ratio tests. Realistic
simulations show that our procedure is robust and that it leads to accurate
estimates, both of parameters and of standard errors. This approach improves on
previous ad hoc least squares procedures by giving a more explicit stochastic
model for certain fluorescence images and by employing a consistent framework
for analysis.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/09-AOAS299 the Annals of
Applied Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aoas/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Design and theoretical analysis of advanced power based positioning in RF system
Accurate locating and tracking of people and resources has become a fundamental requirement for many applications. The global navigation satellite systems (GNSS) is widely used. But its accuracy suffers from signal obstruction by buildings, multipath fading, and disruption due to jamming and spoof. Hence, it is required to supplement GPS with inertial sensors and indoor localization schemes that make use of WiFi APs or beacon nodes. In the GPS-challenging or fault scenario, radio-frequency (RF) infrastructure based localization schemes can be a fallback solution for robust navigation. For the indoor/outdoor transition scenario, we propose hypothesis test based fusion method to integrate multi-modal localization sensors. In the first paper, a ubiquitous tracking using motion and location sensor (UTMLS) is proposed. As a fallback approach, power-based schemes are cost-effective when compared with the existing ToA or AoA schemes. However, traditional power-based positioning methods suffer from low accuracy and are vulnerable to environmental fading. Also, the expected accuracy of power-based localization is not well understood but is needed to derive the hypothesis test for the fusion scheme. Hence, in paper 2-5, we focus on developing more accurate power-based localization schemes. The second paper improves the power-based range estimation accuracy by estimating the LoS component. The ranging error model in fading channel is derived. The third paper introduces the LoS-based positioning method with corresponding theoretical limits and error models. In the fourth and fifth paper, a novel antenna radiation-pattern-aware power-based positioning (ARPAP) system and power contour circle fitting (PCCF) algorithm are proposed to address antenna directivity effect on power-based localization. Overall, a complete LoS signal power based positioning system has been developed that can be included in the fusion scheme --Abstract, page iv
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