13,483 research outputs found
A Robust Zero-Calibration RF-based Localization System for Realistic Environments
Due to the noisy indoor radio propagation channel, Radio Frequency (RF)-based
location determination systems usually require a tedious calibration phase to
construct an RF fingerprint of the area of interest. This fingerprint varies
with the used mobile device, changes of the transmit power of smart access
points (APs), and dynamic changes in the environment; requiring re-calibration
of the area of interest; which reduces the technology ease of use. In this
paper, we present IncVoronoi: a novel system that can provide zero-calibration
accurate RF-based indoor localization that works in realistic environments. The
basic idea is that the relative relation between the received signal strength
from two APs at a certain location reflects the relative distance from this
location to the respective APs. Building on this, IncVoronoi incrementally
reduces the user ambiguity region based on refining the Voronoi tessellation of
the area of interest. IncVoronoi also includes a number of modules to
efficiently run in realtime as well as to handle practical deployment issues
including the noisy wireless environment, obstacles in the environment,
heterogeneous devices hardware, and smart APs. We have deployed IncVoronoi on
different Android phones using the iBeacons technology in a university campus.
Evaluation of IncVoronoi with a side-by-side comparison with traditional
fingerprinting techniques shows that it can achieve a consistent median
accuracy of 2.8m under different scenarios with a low beacon density of one
beacon every 44m2. Compared to fingerprinting techniques, whose accuracy
degrades by at least 156%, this accuracy comes with no training overhead and is
robust to the different user devices, different transmit powers, and over
temporal changes in the environment. This highlights the promise of IncVoronoi
as a next generation indoor localization system.Comment: 9 pages, 13 figures, published in SECON 201
Hybrid Radio-map for Noise Tolerant Wireless Indoor Localization
In wireless networks, radio-map based locating techniques are commonly used
to cope the complex fading feature of radio signal, in which a radio-map is
built by calibrating received signal strength (RSS) signatures at training
locations in the offline phase. However, in severe hostile environments, such
as in ship cabins where severe shadowing, blocking and multi-path fading
effects are posed by ubiquitous metallic architecture, even radio-map cannot
capture the dynamics of RSS. In this paper, we introduced multiple feature
radio-map location method for severely noisy environments. We proposed to add
low variance signature into radio map. Since the low variance signatures are
generally expensive to obtain, we focus on the scenario when the low variance
signatures are sparse. We studied efficient construction of multi-feature
radio-map in offline phase, and proposed feasible region narrowing down and
particle based algorithm for online tracking. Simulation results show the
remarkably performance improvement in terms of positioning accuracy and
robustness against RSS noises than the traditional radio-map method.Comment: 6 pages, 11th IEEE International Conference on Networking, Sensing
and Control, April 7-9, 2014, Miami, FL, US
Acoustical Ranging Techniques in Embedded Wireless Sensor Networked Devices
Location sensing provides endless opportunities for a wide range of applications in GPS-obstructed environments;
where, typically, there is a need for higher degree of accuracy. In this article, we focus on robust range
estimation, an important prerequisite for fine-grained localization. Motivated by the promise of acoustic in
delivering high ranging accuracy, we present the design, implementation and evaluation of acoustic (both
ultrasound and audible) ranging systems.We distill the limitations of acoustic ranging; and present efficient
signal designs and detection algorithms to overcome the challenges of coverage, range, accuracy/resolution,
tolerance to Doppler’s effect, and audible intensity. We evaluate our proposed techniques experimentally on
TWEET, a low-power platform purpose-built for acoustic ranging applications. Our experiments demonstrate
an operational range of 20 m (outdoor) and an average accuracy 2 cm in the ultrasound domain. Finally,
we present the design of an audible-range acoustic tracking service that encompasses the benefits of a near-inaudible
acoustic broadband chirp and approximately two times increase in Doppler tolerance to achieve better performance
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