19 research outputs found

    Off-line evaluation of indoor positioning systems in different scenarios: the experiences from IPIN 2020 competition

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    Every year, for ten years now, the IPIN competition has aimed at evaluating real-world indoor localisation systems by testing them in a realistic environment, with realistic movement, using the EvAAL framework. The competition provided a unique overview of the state-of-the-art of systems, technologies, and methods for indoor positioning and navigation purposes. Through fair comparison of the performance achieved by each system, the competition was able to identify the most promising approaches and to pinpoint the most critical working conditions. In 2020, the competition included 5 diverse off-site off-site Tracks, each resembling real use cases and challenges for indoor positioning. The results in terms of participation and accuracy of the proposed systems have been encouraging. The best performing competitors obtained a third quartile of error of 1 m for the Smartphone Track and 0.5 m for the Foot-mounted IMU Track. While not running on physical systems, but only as algorithms, these results represent impressive achievements.Track 3 organizers were supported by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska Curie Grant 813278 (A-WEAR: A network for dynamic WEarable Applications with pRivacy constraints), MICROCEBUS (MICINN, ref. RTI2018-095168-B-C55, MCIU/AEI/FEDER UE), INSIGNIA (MICINN ref. PTQ2018-009981), and REPNIN+ (MICINN, ref. TEC2017-90808-REDT). We would like to thanks the UJI’s Library managers and employees for their support while collecting the required datasets for Track 3. Track 5 organizers were supported by JST-OPERA Program, Japan, under Grant JPMJOP1612. Track 7 organizers were supported by the Bavarian Ministry for Economic Affairs, Infrastructure, Transport and Technology through the Center for Analytics-Data-Applications (ADA-Center) within the framework of “BAYERN DIGITAL II. ” Team UMinho (Track 3) was supported by FCT—Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia within the R&D Units Project Scope under Grant UIDB/00319/2020, and the Ph.D. Fellowship under Grant PD/BD/137401/2018. Team YAI (Track 3) was supported by the Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) of Taiwan under Grant MOST 109-2221-E-197-026. Team Indora (Track 3) was supported in part by the Slovak Grant Agency, Ministry of Education and Academy of Science, Slovakia, under Grant 1/0177/21, and in part by the Slovak Research and Development Agency under Contract APVV-15-0091. Team TJU (Track 3) was supported in part by the National Natural Science Foundation of China under Grant 61771338 and in part by the Tianjin Research Funding under Grant 18ZXRHSY00190. Team Next-Newbie Reckoners (Track 3) were supported by the Singapore Government through the Industry Alignment Fund—Industry Collaboration Projects Grant. This research was conducted at Singtel Cognitive and Artificial Intelligence Lab for Enterprises (SCALE@NTU), which is a collaboration between Singapore Telecommunications Limited (Singtel) and Nanyang Technological University (NTU). Team KawaguchiLab (Track 5) was supported by JSPS KAKENHI under Grant JP17H01762. Team WHU&AutoNavi (Track 6) was supported by the National Key Research and Development Program of China under Grant 2016YFB0502202. Team YAI (Tracks 6 and 7) was supported by the Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) of Taiwan under Grant MOST 110-2634-F-155-001

    Off-Line Evaluation of Indoor Positioning Systems in Different Scenarios: The Experiences From IPIN 2020 Competition

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    Every year, for ten years now, the IPIN competition has aimed at evaluating real-world indoor localisation systems by testing them in a realistic environment, with realistic movement, using the EvAAL framework. The competition provided a unique overview of the state-of-the-art of systems, technologies, and methods for indoor positioning and navigation purposes. Through fair comparison of the performance achieved by each system, the competition was able to identify the most promising approaches and to pinpoint the most critical working conditions. In 2020, the competition included 5 diverse off-site off-site Tracks, each resembling real use cases and challenges for indoor positioning. The results in terms of participation and accuracy of the proposed systems have been encouraging. The best performing competitors obtained a third quartile of error of 1 m for the Smartphone Track and 0.5 m for the Foot-mounted IMU Track. While not running on physical systems, but only as algorithms, these results represent impressive achievements.Track 3 organizers were supported by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska Curie Grant 813278 (A-WEAR: A network for dynamic WEarable Applications with pRivacy constraints), MICROCEBUS (MICINN, ref. RTI2018-095168-B-C55, MCIU/AEI/FEDER UE), INSIGNIA (MICINN ref. PTQ2018-009981), and REPNIN+ (MICINN, ref. TEC2017-90808-REDT). We would like to thanks the UJI’s Library managers and employees for their support while collecting the required datasets for Track 3. Track 5 organizers were supported by JST-OPERA Program, Japan, under Grant JPMJOP1612. Track 7 organizers were supported by the Bavarian Ministry for Economic Affairs, Infrastructure, Transport and Technology through the Center for Analytics-Data-Applications (ADA-Center) within the framework of “BAYERN DIGITAL II. ” Team UMinho (Track 3) was supported by FCT—Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia within the R&D Units Project Scope under Grant UIDB/00319/2020, and the Ph.D. Fellowship under Grant PD/BD/137401/2018. Team YAI (Track 3) was supported by the Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) of Taiwan under Grant MOST 109-2221-E-197-026. Team Indora (Track 3) was supported in part by the Slovak Grant Agency, Ministry of Education and Academy of Science, Slovakia, under Grant 1/0177/21, and in part by the Slovak Research and Development Agency under Contract APVV-15-0091. Team TJU (Track 3) was supported in part by the National Natural Science Foundation of China under Grant 61771338 and in part by the Tianjin Research Funding under Grant 18ZXRHSY00190. Team Next-Newbie Reckoners (Track 3) were supported by the Singapore Government through the Industry Alignment Fund—Industry Collaboration Projects Grant. This research was conducted at Singtel Cognitive and Artificial Intelligence Lab for Enterprises (SCALE@NTU), which is a collaboration between Singapore Telecommunications Limited (Singtel) and Nanyang Technological University (NTU). Team KawaguchiLab (Track 5) was supported by JSPS KAKENHI under Grant JP17H01762. Team WHU&AutoNavi (Track 6) was supported by the National Key Research and Development Program of China under Grant 2016YFB0502202. Team YAI (Tracks 6 and 7) was supported by the Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) of Taiwan under Grant MOST 110-2634-F-155-001.Peer reviewe

    A privacy-preserving sensory data sharing scheme in Internet of Vehicles

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    Internet of Vehicles (IoV), which enables information gathering and disseminating among vehicles, roadside infrastructures and surrounding environments, has received considerable attention recently. However, the flourishing of IoV still faces several challenges in terms of location privacy preservation, vehicular sensory data collection and vehicular sensory data acquisition. Aiming at these challenges, in this paper, we propose a novel efficient and location privacy-preserving data sharing scheme with collusion resistance in IoV, which enables the collection and distribution of the data captured by vehicular sensors. During the vehicular sensory data collection phase, each vehicle structures the multi-dimensional sensory data captured at different locations and exploits the modified Paillier Cryptosystem to achieve the location privacy-preserving sensory data aggregation, while the data aggregation result of multiple vehicles can be recovered by the trusted central entity. During the vehicular sensory data acquisition phase, the proposed scheme exploits the proxy re-encryption technique to achieve the location privacy-preserving data querying at the network edge, i.e., the vehicles query the RSU instead of the trusted central entity. Numerical analysis are performed to validate the effectiveness of the proposed scheme, i.e., low data querying failure probability. Security analysis and performance evaluations are also carried out to validate the security properties and show the computation and communication efficiency of the proposed scheme.EDB (Economic Devt. Board, S’pore

    Achieve Location Privacy-Preserving Range Query in Vehicular Sensing

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    Modern vehicles are equipped with a plethora of on-board sensors and large on-board storage, which enables them to gather and store various local-relevant data. However, the wide application of vehicular sensing has its own challenges, among which location-privacy preservation and data query accuracy are two critical problems. In this paper, we propose a novel range query scheme, which helps the data requester to accurately retrieve the sensed data from the distributive on-board storage in vehicular ad hoc networks (VANETs) with location privacy preservation. The proposed scheme exploits structured scalars to denote the locations of data requesters and vehicles, and achieves the privacy-preserving location matching with the homomorphic Paillier cryptosystem technique. Detailed security analysis shows that the proposed range query scheme can successfully preserve the location privacy of the involved data requesters and vehicles, and protect the confidentiality of the sensed data. In addition, performance evaluations are conducted to show the efficiency of the proposed scheme, in terms of computation delay and communication overhead. Specifically, the computation delay and communication overhead are not dependent on the length of the scalar, and they are only proportional to the number of vehicles

    A Privacy-Preserving and Verifiable Querying Scheme in Vehicular Fog Data Dissemination

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    On feasibility and limitations of detecting false data injection attacks on power grid state estimation using D-FACTS devices

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    Recent studies have investigated the possibilities of proactively detecting the high-profile false data injection (FDI) attacks on power grid state estimation by using the distributed flexible ac transmission system (D-FACTS) devices, termed as proactive false data detection (PFDD) approach. However, the feasibility and limitations of such an approach have not been systematically studied in the existing literature. In this paper, we explore the feasibility and limitations of adopting the PFDD approach to thwart FDI attacks on power grid state estimation. Specifically, we thoroughly study the feasibility of using PFDD to detect FDI attacks by considering single-bus, uncoordinated multiple-bus, and coordinated multiple-bus FDI attacks, respectively. We prove that PFDD can detect all these three types of FDI attacks targeted on buses or super-buses with degrees larger than 1, if and only if the deployment of D-FACTS devices covers branches at least containing a spanning tree of the grid graph. The minimum efforts required for activating D-FACTS devices to detect each type of FDI attacks are, respectively, evaluated. In addition, we also discuss the limitations of this approach; it is strictly proved that PFDD is not able to detect FDI attacks targeted on buses or super-buses with degrees equalling 1.Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR)Ministry of Education (MOE)Nanyang Technological UniversityNational Research Foundation (NRF)This work was supported in part by the National Key Research and Development Program of China under Grant 2016YFB08006004 and Grant 2016YFB08006005; in part by the National Natural Science Foundation of China under Grant 61872255, Grant U1736212, and Grant 61572334; in part by the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities, Sichuan University under Grant YJ201933; in part by the Ministry of Education, Singapore under Contract MOE2016-T2-1-119; in part by the Future Resilient System Project at the Singapore-ETH Centre funded by the National Research Foundation of Singapore under its Campus for Research Excellence and Technological Enterprise Program; in part by the Nanyang Technological University (NTU) Internal Funding - SUG - CoE (M4082287) and A*STAR-NTU-SUTD AI Partnership under Grant RGANS1906; in part by the Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province under Grant LY17F020006; and in part by the Key Research and Development Program of Science and Technology Department of Zhejiang Province under Grant 2017C01015. Paper no. TII-19-0385

    Towards Predicting the Measurement Noise Covariance with a Transformer and Residual Denoising Autoencoder for GNSS/INS Tightly-Coupled Integrated Navigation

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    The tightly coupled navigation system is commonly used in UAV products and land vehicles. It adopts the Kalman filter to combine raw satellite observations, including the pseudorange, pseudorange rate and Doppler frequency, with the inertial measurements to achieve high navigational accuracy in GNSS-challenged environments. The accurate estimation of measurement noise covariance can ensure the quick convergence of the Kalman filter and the accuracy of the navigation results. Existing tightly coupled integrated navigation systems employ either constant noise covariance or simple noise covariance updating methods, which cannot accurately reflect the dynamic measurement noises. In this article, we propose an adaptive measurement noise estimation algorithm using a transformer and residual denoising autoencoder (RDAE), which can dynamically estimate the covariance of measurement noise. The residual module is used to solve the gradient degradation problem. The DAE is adopted to learn the essential characteristics from the noisy ephemeris data. By introducing the attention mechanism, the transformer can effectively learn the time and space dependency of long-term ephemeris data, and thus dynamically adjusts the noise covariance with the predicted factors. Extensive experimental results demonstrate that our method can achieve sub-meter positioning accuracy in the outdoor open environment. In a GNSS-degraded environment, our proposed method can still obtain about 3 m positioning accuracy. Another test on a new dataset also confirms that our proposed method has reasonable robustness and adaptability
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