616 research outputs found

    RFID Localisation For Internet Of Things Smart Homes: A Survey

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    The Internet of Things (IoT) enables numerous business opportunities in fields as diverse as e-health, smart cities, smart homes, among many others. The IoT incorporates multiple long-range, short-range, and personal area wireless networks and technologies into the designs of IoT applications. Localisation in indoor positioning systems plays an important role in the IoT. Location Based IoT applications range from tracking objects and people in real-time, assets management, agriculture, assisted monitoring technologies for healthcare, and smart homes, to name a few. Radio Frequency based systems for indoor positioning such as Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) is a key enabler technology for the IoT due to its costeffective, high readability rates, automatic identification and, importantly, its energy efficiency characteristic. This paper reviews the state-of-the-art RFID technologies in IoT Smart Homes applications. It presents several comparable studies of RFID based projects in smart homes and discusses the applications, techniques, algorithms, and challenges of adopting RFID technologies in IoT smart home systems.Comment: 18 pages, 2 figures, 3 table

    Recurrent Neural Networks For Accurate RSSI Indoor Localization

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    This paper proposes recurrent neuron networks (RNNs) for a fingerprinting indoor localization using WiFi. Instead of locating user's position one at a time as in the cases of conventional algorithms, our RNN solution aims at trajectory positioning and takes into account the relation among the received signal strength indicator (RSSI) measurements in a trajectory. Furthermore, a weighted average filter is proposed for both input RSSI data and sequential output locations to enhance the accuracy among the temporal fluctuations of RSSI. The results using different types of RNN including vanilla RNN, long short-term memory (LSTM), gated recurrent unit (GRU) and bidirectional LSTM (BiLSTM) are presented. On-site experiments demonstrate that the proposed structure achieves an average localization error of 0.750.75 m with 80%80\% of the errors under 11 m, which outperforms the conventional KNN algorithms and probabilistic algorithms by approximately 30%30\% under the same test environment.Comment: Received signal strength indicator (RSSI), WiFi indoor localization, recurrent neuron network (RNN), long shortterm memory (LSTM), fingerprint-based localizatio

    A Generative Method for Indoor Localization Using Wi-Fi Fingerprinting

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    Indoor localization is an enabling technology for pervasive and mobile computing applications. Although different technologies have been proposed for indoor localization, Wi-Fi fingerprinting is one of the most used techniques due to the pervasiveness of Wi-Fi technology. Most Wi-Fi fingerprinting localization methods presented in the literature are discriminative methods. We present a generative method for indoor localization based on Wi-Fi fingerprinting. The Received Signal Strength Indicator received from a Wireless Access Point is modeled by a hidden Markov model. Unlike other algorithms, the use of a hidden Markov model allows ours to take advantage of the temporal autocorrelation present in the Wi-Fi signal. The algorithm estimates the user’s location based on the hidden Markov model, which models the signal and the forward algorithm to determine the likelihood of a given time series of Received Signal Strength Indicators. The proposed method was compared with four other well-known Machine Learning algorithms through extensive experimentation with data collected in real scenarios. The proposed method obtained competitive results in most scenarios tested and was the best method in 17 of 60 experiments performed

    Social-Loc: Improving indoor localization with social sensing

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    Location-based services, such as targeted advertisement, geo-social networking and emergency services, are becoming in-creasingly popular for mobile applications. While GPS pro-vides accurate outdoor locations, accurate indoor localiza-tion schemes still require either additional infrastructure support (e.g., ranging devices) or extensive training before system deployment (e.g., WiFi signal fingerprinting). In or-der to help existing localization systems to overcome their limitations or to further improve their accuracy, we propose Social-Loc, a middleware that takes the potential locations for individual users, which is estimated by any underlying indoor localization system as input and exploits both so-cial encounter and non-encounter events to cooperatively calibrate the estimation errors. We have fully implemented Social-Loc on the Android platform and demonstrated its performance on two underlying indoor localization systems: Dead-reckoning and WiFi fingerprint. Experiment results show that Social-Loc improves user’s localization accuracy of WiFi fingerprint and dead-reckoning by at least 22 % and 37%, respectively. Large-scale simulation results indicate Social-Loc is scalable, provides good accuracy for a long du-ration of time, and is robust against measurement errors

    A Low-complexity trajectory privacy preservation approach for indoor fingerprinting positioning systems

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    Location fingerprinting is a technique employed when Global Positioning System (GPS) positioning breaks down within indoor environments. Since Location Service Providers (LSPs) would implicitly have access to such information, preserving user privacy has become a challenging issue in location estimation systems. This paper proposes a low-complexity k-anonymity approach for preserving the privacy of user location and trajectory, in which real location/trajectory data is hidden within k fake locations/trajectories held by the LSP, without degrading overall localization accuracy. To this end, three novel location privacy preserving methods and a trajectory privacy preserving algorithm are outlined. The fake trajectories are generated so as to exhibit characteristics of the user’s real trajectory. In the proposed method, no initial knowledge of the environment or location of the Access Points (APs) is required in order for the user to generate the fake location/trajectory. Moreover, the LSP is able to preserve privacy of the fingerprinting database from the users. The proposed approaches are evaluated in both simulation and experimental testing, with the proposed methods outperforming other well-known k-anonymity methods. The method further exhibits a lower implementation complexity and higher movement similarity (of up to 88%) between the real and fake trajectories

    A Review of Hybrid Indoor Positioning Systems Employing WLAN Fingerprinting and Image Processing

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    Location-based services (LBS) are a significant permissive technology. One of the main components in indoor LBS is the indoor positioning system (IPS). IPS utilizes many existing technologies such as radio frequency, images, acoustic signals, as well as magnetic sensors, thermal sensors, optical sensors, and other sensors that are usually installed in a mobile device. The radio frequency technologies used in IPS are WLAN, Bluetooth, Zig Bee, RFID, frequency modulation, and ultra-wideband. This paper explores studies that have combined WLAN fingerprinting and image processing to build an IPS. The studies on combined WLAN fingerprinting and image processing techniques are divided based on the methods used. The first part explains the studies that have used WLAN fingerprinting to support image positioning. The second part examines works that have used image processing to support WLAN fingerprinting positioning. Then, image processing and WLAN fingerprinting are used in combination to build IPS in the third part. A new concept is proposed at the end for the future development of indoor positioning models based on WLAN fingerprinting and supported by image processing to solve the effect of people presence around users and the user orientation problem
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