9 research outputs found

    Metoda za določanje položaja v prostoru na osnovi signalov WiFi in modela zgradbe

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    WiFi indoor localization is a difficult task due to the variability of the WiFi signal. Consequently, there have been many attempts to develop WiFi-based methods which were aided by some other means to provide accurate indoor localization. Technologies like dead reckoning and IMU sensors, crowd utilization and pattern matching, specialized Li-Fi hardware and directional antennas, etc. were used to aid the WiFi in order to develop more accurate and stable methods. The main disadvantage of such methods lies in difficult deployments due to technologies and requirements: Dead-reckoning-aided methods are not suitable for stationary objects, methods leveraging groups of people and many individuals are not best suited for home environment, Li-Fi assisted methods require mobile terminals to provide Li-Fi connectivity and therefore rule out mobile phones as the most common terminal. In the past, many fingerprinting methods were proposedthese require a survey in the area of localization during the setup phase. Unfortunately, the majority of fingerprinting-based methods do not address issues of long-term stability of the WiFi signals. Thus, they face accuracy issues a few days after the calibrationfrequent, costly and time-consuming recalibration procedures are used to address these issues. Model-based methods try to eliminate calibration procedures by simulating signal propagation. Many of the methods assume at least some parameters of propagation as fixed and therefore poorly address the issues of WiFiā€™s variability and long-term stability. A pure WiFi model-based method that successfully addresses these issues and requires a mobile terminal only for emitting or receiving the WiFi signals is the ultimate goal of the WiFi indoor localization. This thesis presents a novel indoor localization method, with the main intent of addressing the issues of real-world applicability. Therefore, we focused on developing a method with accuracy comparable to the state-of-the-art methods, while reducing the complexity of deployment and minimizing the required maintenance for long-term deployments. The presented method is a model-based method, implementing self-adaptive operability, i.e. it does not require any human intervention. The thesis discusses in detail the topics of the long-term stability of the WiFi signal, receiving vs. transmitting methods, the future WiFi standards, comparability of the methods and architectural aspects with respect to real-world applicability of the localization methods. Our presented method estimates the parameters of signal propagation, by knowing the positions of the access points, the architectural floor plan with the dividing walls and by monitoring power of the packets travelling between the access points. From this data propagation parameters defined in propagation model are inferred in an online manner. A device trying to define its position captures power information of the packets sent by the access points. Devicesā€™ information on the observed power is used to determine its position by an algorithm run on the localization server. The presented WiFi method is primarily developed and evaluated in single- and multi-room office environments. The methodā€™s ability to be easily applicable in any environment is emphasized by its evaluation in two different environments ā€“ office and residential. Between the two, no parameters were modified, thus evaluations indicate universality of the method. Furthermore, we provide evaluation also in narrow hallway because in the field of indoor localization such evaluation environments are common practice. During the evaluation of our proposed method in the office environment, we obtained an average error of 2.63 m and 3.22 m for the single- and multi-room environments respectively. Second evaluation was performed in the residential environment, for which the method or any of the parameters were not modified. Our method achieved an average evaluation error of 2.65 m with standard deviation of 1.51 m, during the four independent evaluations, each consisting of 17 localization points. High accuracy of localization, with acknowledgement to the intricate and realistic multi-room floor plan with different types of walls, realistic furniture and real-world signal interference from the neighboring apartments, proves the methodā€™s applicability to the real-world environment. Evaluation accuracy can be compared to the state-of-the-art methods, while our easily-applicable method requires far less complicated setup procedures and/or hardware requirements. In the second part of the thesis, we generalize the WiFi method to be applicable to the frequencies other than 2.4 GHz WiFi. By defining a fusion algorithm which considers accuracy of the individual frequencies, we have defined the MFAM method: Multiple Frequency Adaptive Model-Based Indoor Localization Method. The MFAM is one of the first purely model-based approaches capable of utilizing multiple frequencies simultaneously. The MFAM method was evaluated in residential environment on two frequency bands: 868 MHz and 2.4 GHz. The method retained positive properties of our WiFi approach (e.g. pure model-based, self-adaptive operability, wide applicability on affordable hardware), while improving the accuracy due to multi-frequency fusion. The usage of multiple frequencies improved the average error of localization from 2.65 m, while using only the WiFi, down to 2.16 m, in the case of multi-frequency fusion, thus improving localization accuracy for 18%. Similar improvements were observed also for the standard deviation. Although the accuracy of the presented WiFi and MFAM methods is comparable if not better than the state-of-the-art methods, one of the most important achievements of our work is the applicability of the method to the real-world situations and its long-term stability. The definition of our method ensures that the accuracy of the method will be the same at the time it is initialized, as well as days later, without any human interaction.Določanje lokacije znotraj prostorov na podlagi WiFi signalov je zaradi variabilnosti signala WiFi težka naloga. Posledično je bilo v preteklosti veliko poizkusov razvoja WiFi metod, ki uporabljajo dodatne informacije za natančno lokalizacijo. Ocena prehojene poti in inercijski senzorji, uporaba množice ljudi in ujemanje vzorcev, tehnologija Li-Fi in usmerjene antene itd. je le nekaj v preteklosti uporabljenih načinov za dopolnitev WiFi signalov pri razvoju natančnih in stabilnih metod. Glavna slabost takih metod se kaže v zahtevnem uvajanju zaradi uporabljenih tehnologij in zahtev: metode ocene prehojene poti niso primerne za stacionarne predmete, metode, ki uporabljajo množice ljudi, niso primerne za domače okolje, Li-Fi metode zahtevajo, da so mobilni terminali opremljeni z ustreznimi sprejemniki in tako izključijo mobilne telefone kot terminale. V preteklosti so bile predlagane Å”tevilne metode, ki bazirajo na prstnih odtisih signalov. Te metode zahtevajo kalibracijske meritve v prostoru v fazi implementacije metode. Večina teh metod ne naslovi vpraÅ”anj dolgoročne stabilnosti WiFi signalov, posledično se soočajo s težavami zaradi natančnosti nekaj dni po kalibraciji. Pogoste, drage in časovno potratne ponovne kalibracije so potrebne za reÅ”evanje teh težav. Metode, temelječe na matematičnih modelih, poskuÅ”ajo eliminirati kalibracijske postopke s simulacijo Å”irjenja signala. Večina teh metod vseeno privzame vsaj nekatere parametre propagacije kot fiksne in tako slabo naslovi variabilnost WiFi signalov in dolgoročno stabilnost. Izključno WiFi modelna metoda, ki uspeÅ”no naslovi te težave in zahteva, da mobilni terminal samo oddaja ali sprejema WiFi signale, je končni cilj WiFi metod za določanje položaja v zaprtih prostorih. Ta doktorska dizertacija predstavlja novo metodo za določanje pozicije znotraj prostorov, z glavnim ciljem, da naslovi težave pri realni uporabi. Zato smo se osredotočili na razvoj metode z natančnostjo, ki je primerljiva z najsodobnejÅ”imi metodami, hkrati pa je cilj zmanjÅ”ati kompleksnost implementacije in vzdrževanje za dolgoročno uporabnost. Predstavljena metoda je modelnega tipa in implementira prilagodljivo delovanje, zato ne zahteva nobenega človeÅ”kega posredovanja. Dizertacija podrobno razpravlja o temah dolgoročne stabilnosti WiFi signalov, o metodah, temelječih na sprejemanju in oddajanju signalov, prihodnjih standardih WiFi, primerljivosti sorodnih metod in arhitekturnih vplivih z ozirom na realno uporabnost. NaÅ”a metoda predstavljena v tej nalogi oceni prametre propagacije signala iz poznavanja pozicije dostopnih točk, arhitekturnega načrta z informacijami o predelnih stenah in s pomočjo opazovanja moči paketov, ki potujejo med dostopnimi točkami. Iz teh podatkov se propagacijski parametri definirani v modelu določijo v realnem času. Naprava, ki želi določiti pozicijo zajame informacijo o moči paketov, ki jih poÅ”iljajo dostopne točke. Te meritve so uporabljene v algoritmu za določanje pozicije naprave, ki teče na strežniku. Predstavljena metoda je bila primarno razvita in evalvirana v enosobni in večsobni postavitvi pisarniÅ”kega okolja. Sposobnost metode, da se enostavno prilagodi vsakemu okolju, je poudarjena z evalvacijo v dveh okoljih ā€“ pisarniÅ”kem in stanovanjskem. Med obema evalvacijama nismo spremenili nobenega parametra metode, kar indicira njeno univerzalnost. V nadaljevanju predstavimo tudi evalvacijo metode v dolgem hodniku, ker je v raziskovalnem področju lokalizacije znotraj prostorov tako okolje pogosto uporabljeno. Evalvacija predlagane metode v pisarniÅ”kem okolju je rezultirala v povprečni napaki 2,63 m in 3,22 m za enosobno in večsobno postavitev. Druga evalvacija je bila opravljena v stanovanjskem okolju, za katerega nismo spreminjali metode ali njenih parametrov. NaÅ”a metoda je tekom evalvacije Å”tirih neodvisnih setov meritev, od katerih je vsak sestavljen iz 17 lokalizacijskih točk, dosegla povprečno napako lokalizacije 2,65 m s standardno deviacijo 1,51 m. Visoka natančnost lokalizacije ob upoÅ”tevanju zapletenega in realističnega večsobnega tlorisa, ki vsebuje več vrst sten, realistično pohiÅ”tvo in motnje signalov iz sosednjih stanovanj, dokazuje uporabnost metode v praksi. Natančnost je primerljiva z najsodobnejÅ”imi metodami, medtem ko naÅ”a metoda zahteva veliko manj zapletene postopke namestitve in/ali strojne zahteve. V drugem delu teze posploÅ”imo WiFi metodo, da lahko uporablja tudi druge frekvence poleg 2,4 GHz WiFi. Z definicijo fuzijskega algoritma, ki upoÅ”teva natančnost posameznih frekvenc, smo definirali MFAM metodo ā€“ večfrekvenčno prilagodljivo modelno metodo za določanje lokacije znotraj stavb (ang. multiple frequency adaptive model-based indoor localization method). MFAM metoda predstavlja eno prvih modelnih metod, ki lahko hkrati uporablja več frekvenc. MFAM metoda je bila evalvirana v stanovanjskem okolju na dveh frekvenčnih pasovih: 868 MHz in 2,4 GHz. Metoda je ohranila pozitivne lastnosti predlagane WiFi metode (tj. izključno modelni pristop, prilagodljivo delovanje, možnost Å”iroke uporabe na dosegljivi strojni opremi), hkrati pa rezultira v boljÅ”i natančnosti zaradi fuzije signalov več frekvenc. Uporaba več frekvenc je izboljÅ”ala povprečno napako iz 2,65 m pri uporabi WiFi na 2,16 m, s čimer se izboljÅ”a natančnost lokalizacije za 18%podobne izboljÅ”ave smo opazili tudi pri standardnemu odklonu. Čeprav je natančnost predstavljenih WiFi in MFAM metod primerljiva, če ne boljÅ”a, kot trenutno najsodobnejÅ”e metode, je eden najpomembnejÅ”ih dosežkov naÅ”ega dela uporabnost metode v realnih situacijah in njena dolgoročna stabilnost. Definicija naÅ”e metode zagotavlja, da bo natančnost metode ob času postavitve enaka kot dneve kasneje brez človeÅ”ke interakcije

    Indoor Localization Method Based on WiFi Signals and Building Layout Model

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    WiFi indoor localization is a difficult task due to the variability of the WiFi signal. Consequently, there have been many attempts to develop WiFi-based methods which were aided by some other means to provide accurate indoor localization. Technologies like dead reckoning and IMU sensors, crowd utilization and pattern matching, specialized Li-Fi hardware and directional antennas, etc. were used to aid the WiFi in order to develop more accurate and stable methods. The main disadvantage of such methods lies in difficult deployments due to technologies and requirements: Dead-reckoning-aided methods are not suitable for stationary objects, methods leveraging groups of people and many individuals are not best suited for home environment, Li-Fi assisted methods require mobile terminals to provide Li-Fi connectivity and therefore rule out mobile phones as the most common terminal. In the past, many fingerprinting methods were proposed; these require a survey in the area of localization during the setup phase. Unfortunately, the majority of fingerprinting-based methods do not address issues of long-term stability of the WiFi signals. Thus, they face accuracy issues a few days after the calibration; frequent, costly and time-consuming recalibration procedures are used to address these issues. Model-based methods try to eliminate calibration procedures by simulating signal propagation. Many of the methods assume at least some parameters of propagation as fixed and therefore poorly address the issues of WiFiā€™s variability and long-term stability. A pure WiFi model-based method that successfully addresses these issues and requires a mobile terminal only for emitting or receiving the WiFi signals is the ultimate goal of the WiFi indoor localization. This thesis presents a novel indoor localization method, with the main intent of addressing the issues of real-world applicability. Therefore, we focused on developing a method with accuracy comparable to the state-of-the-art methods, while reducing the complexity of deployment and minimizing the required maintenance for long-term deployments. The presented method is a model-based method, implementing self-adaptive operability, i.e. it does not require any human intervention. The thesis discusses in detail the topics of the long-term stability of the WiFi signal, receiving vs. transmitting methods, the future WiFi standards, comparability of the methods and architectural aspects with respect to real-world applicability of the localization methods. Our presented method estimates the parameters of signal propagation, by knowing the positions of the access points, the architectural floor plan with the dividing walls and by monitoring power of the packets travelling between the access points. From this data propagation parameters defined in propagation model are inferred in an online manner. A device trying to define its position captures power information of the packets sent by the access points. Devicesā€™ information on the observed power is used to determine its position by an algorithm run on the localization server. The presented WiFi method is primarily developed and evaluated in single- and multi-room office environments. The methodā€™s ability to be easily applicable in any environment is emphasized by its evaluation in two different environments ā€“ office and residential. Between the two, no parameters were modified, thus evaluations indicate universality of the method. Furthermore, we provide evaluation also in narrow hallway because in the field of indoor localization such evaluation environments are common practice. During the evaluation of our proposed method in the office environment, we obtained an average error of 2.63 m and 3.22 m for the single- and multi-room environments respectively. Second evaluation was performed in the residential environment, for which the method or any of the parameters were not modified. Our method achieved an average evaluation error of 2.65 m with standard deviation of 1.51 m, during the four independent evaluations, each consisting of 17 localization points. High accuracy of localization, with acknowledgement to the intricate and realistic multi-room floor plan with different types of walls, realistic furniture and real-world signal interference from the neighboring apartments, proves the methodā€™s applicability to the real-world environment. Evaluation accuracy can be compared to the state-of-the-art methods, while our easily-applicable method requires far less complicated setup procedures and/or hardware requirements. In the second part of the thesis, we generalize the WiFi method to be applicable to the frequencies other than 2.4 GHz WiFi. By defining a fusion algorithm which considers accuracy of the individual frequencies, we have defined the MFAM method: Multiple Frequency Adaptive Model-Based Indoor Localization Method. The MFAM is one of the first purely model-based approaches capable of utilizing multiple frequencies simultaneously. The MFAM method was evaluated in residential environment on two frequency bands: 868 MHz and 2.4 GHz. The method retained positive properties of our WiFi approach (e.g. pure model-based, self-adaptive operability, wide applicability on affordable hardware), while improving the accuracy due to multi-frequency fusion. The usage of multiple frequencies improved the average error of localization from 2.65 m, while using only the WiFi, down to 2.16 m, in the case of multi-frequency fusion, thus improving localization accuracy for 18%. Similar improvements were observed also for the standard deviation. Although the accuracy of the presented WiFi and MFAM methods is comparable if not better than the state-of-the-art methods, one of the most important achievements of our work is the applicability of the method to the real-world situations and its long-term stability. The definition of our method ensures that the accuracy of the method will be the same at the time it is initialized, as well as days later, without any human interaction

    Indoor Localization Method Based on WiFi Signals and Building Layout Model

    Get PDF
    WiFi indoor localization is a difficult task due to the variability of the WiFi signal. Consequently, there have been many attempts to develop WiFi-based methods which were aided by some other means to provide accurate indoor localization. Technologies like dead reckoning and IMU sensors, crowd utilization and pattern matching, specialized Li-Fi hardware and directional antennas, etc. were used to aid the WiFi in order to develop more accurate and stable methods. The main disadvantage of such methods lies in difficult deployments due to technologies and requirements: Dead-reckoning-aided methods are not suitable for stationary objects, methods leveraging groups of people and many individuals are not best suited for home environment, Li-Fi assisted methods require mobile terminals to provide Li-Fi connectivity and therefore rule out mobile phones as the most common terminal. In the past, many fingerprinting methods were proposed; these require a survey in the area of localization during the setup phase. Unfortunately, the majority of fingerprinting-based methods do not address issues of long-term stability of the WiFi signals. Thus, they face accuracy issues a few days after the calibration; frequent, costly and time-consuming recalibration procedures are used to address these issues. Model-based methods try to eliminate calibration procedures by simulating signal propagation. Many of the methods assume at least some parameters of propagation as fixed and therefore poorly address the issues of WiFiā€™s variability and long-term stability. A pure WiFi model-based method that successfully addresses these issues and requires a mobile terminal only for emitting or receiving the WiFi signals is the ultimate goal of the WiFi indoor localization. This thesis presents a novel indoor localization method, with the main intent of addressing the issues of real-world applicability. Therefore, we focused on developing a method with accuracy comparable to the state-of-the-art methods, while reducing the complexity of deployment and minimizing the required maintenance for long-term deployments. The presented method is a model-based method, implementing self-adaptive operability, i.e. it does not require any human intervention. The thesis discusses in detail the topics of the long-term stability of the WiFi signal, receiving vs. transmitting methods, the future WiFi standards, comparability of the methods and architectural aspects with respect to real-world applicability of the localization methods. Our presented method estimates the parameters of signal propagation, by knowing the positions of the access points, the architectural floor plan with the dividing walls and by monitoring power of the packets travelling between the access points. From this data propagation parameters defined in propagation model are inferred in an online manner. A device trying to define its position captures power information of the packets sent by the access points. Devicesā€™ information on the observed power is used to determine its position by an algorithm run on the localization server. The presented WiFi method is primarily developed and evaluated in single- and multi-room office environments. The methodā€™s ability to be easily applicable in any environment is emphasized by its evaluation in two different environments ā€“ office and residential. Between the two, no parameters were modified, thus evaluations indicate universality of the method. Furthermore, we provide evaluation also in narrow hallway because in the field of indoor localization such evaluation environments are common practice. During the evaluation of our proposed method in the office environment, we obtained an average error of 2.63 m and 3.22 m for the single- and multi-room environments respectively. Second evaluation was performed in the residential environment, for which the method or any of the parameters were not modified. Our method achieved an average evaluation error of 2.65 m with standard deviation of 1.51 m, during the four independent evaluations, each consisting of 17 localization points. High accuracy of localization, with acknowledgement to the intricate and realistic multi-room floor plan with different types of walls, realistic furniture and real-world signal interference from the neighboring apartments, proves the methodā€™s applicability to the real-world environment. Evaluation accuracy can be compared to the state-of-the-art methods, while our easily-applicable method requires far less complicated setup procedures and/or hardware requirements. In the second part of the thesis, we generalize the WiFi method to be applicable to the frequencies other than 2.4 GHz WiFi. By defining a fusion algorithm which considers accuracy of the individual frequencies, we have defined the MFAM method: Multiple Frequency Adaptive Model-Based Indoor Localization Method. The MFAM is one of the first purely model-based approaches capable of utilizing multiple frequencies simultaneously. The MFAM method was evaluated in residential environment on two frequency bands: 868 MHz and 2.4 GHz. The method retained positive properties of our WiFi approach (e.g. pure model-based, self-adaptive operability, wide applicability on affordable hardware), while improving the accuracy due to multi-frequency fusion. The usage of multiple frequencies improved the average error of localization from 2.65 m, while using only the WiFi, down to 2.16 m, in the case of multi-frequency fusion, thus improving localization accuracy for 18%. Similar improvements were observed also for the standard deviation. Although the accuracy of the presented WiFi and MFAM methods is comparable if not better than the state-of-the-art methods, one of the most important achievements of our work is the applicability of the method to the real-world situations and its long-term stability. The definition of our method ensures that the accuracy of the method will be the same at the time it is initialized, as well as days later, without any human interaction

    A Self-Adaptive Model-Based Wi-Fi Indoor Localization Method

    No full text
    This paper presents a novel method for indoor localization, developed with the main aim of making it useful for real-world deployments. Many indoor localization methods exist, yet they have several disadvantages in real-world deploymentsā€”some are static, which is not suitable for long-term usage; some require costly human recalibration procedures; and others require special hardware such as Wi-Fi anchors and transponders. Our method is self-calibrating and self-adaptive thus maintenance free and based on Wi-Fi only. We have employed two well-known propagation modelsā€”free space path loss and ITU modelsā€”which we have extended with additional parameters for better propagation simulation. Our self-calibrating procedure utilizes one propagation model to infer parameters of the space and the other to simulate the propagation of the signal without requiring any additional hardware beside Wi-Fi access points, which is suitable for real-world usage. Our method is also one of the few model-based Wi-Fi only self-adaptive approaches that do not require the mobile terminal to be in the access-point mode. The only input requirements of the method are Wi-Fi access point positions, and positions and properties of the walls. Our method has been evaluated in single- and multi-room environments, with measured mean error of 2ā€“3 and 3ā€“4 m, respectively, which is similar to existing methods. The evaluation has proven that usable localization accuracy can be achieved in real-world environments solely by the proposed Wi-Fi method that relies on simple hardware and software requirements

    A Self-Adaptive Model-Based Wi-Fi Indoor Localization Method

    No full text
    This paper presents a novel method for indoor localization, developed with the main aim of making it useful for real-world deployments. Many indoor localization methods exist, yet they have several disadvantages in real-world deploymentsā€”some are static, which is not suitable for long-term usage; some require costly human recalibration procedures; and others require special hardware such as Wi-Fi anchors and transponders. Our method is self-calibrating and self-adaptive thus maintenance free and based on Wi-Fi only. We have employed two well-known propagation modelsā€”free space path loss and ITU modelsā€”which we have extended with additional parameters for better propagation simulation. Our self-calibrating procedure utilizes one propagation model to infer parameters of the space and the other to simulate the propagation of the signal without requiring any additional hardware beside Wi-Fi access points, which is suitable for real-world usage. Our method is also one of the few model-based Wi-Fi only self-adaptive approaches that do not require the mobile terminal to be in the access-point mode. The only input requirements of the method are Wi-Fi access point positions, and positions and properties of the walls. Our method has been evaluated in single- and multi-room environments, with measured mean error of 2ā€“3 and 3ā€“4 m, respectively, which is similar to existing methods. The evaluation has proven that usable localization accuracy can be achieved in real-world environments solely by the proposed Wi-Fi method that relies on simple hardware and software requirements

    MFAM: Multiple Frequency Adaptive Model-Based Indoor Localization Method

    No full text
    This paper presents MFAM (Multiple Frequency Adaptive Model-based localization method), a novel model-based indoor localization method that is capable of using multiple wireless signal frequencies simultaneously. It utilizes indoor architectural model and physical properties of wireless signal propagation through objects and space. The motivation for developing multiple frequency localization method lies in the future Wi-Fi standards (e.g., 802.11ah) and the growing number of various wireless signals present in the buildings (e.g., Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, ZigBee, etc.). Current indoor localization methods mostly rely on a single wireless signal type and often require many devices to achieve the necessary accuracy. MFAM utilizes multiple wireless signal types and improves the localization accuracy over the usage of a single frequency. It continuously monitors signal propagation through space and adapts the model according to the changes indoors. Using multiple signal sources lowers the required number of access points for a specific signal type while utilizing signals, already present in the indoors. Due to the unavailability of the 802.11ah hardware, we have evaluated proposed method with similar signals; we have used 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi and 868 MHz HomeMatic home automation signals. We have performed the evaluation in a modern two-bedroom apartment and measured mean localization error 2.0 to 2.3 m and median error of 2.0 to 2.2 m. Based on our evaluation results, using two different signals improves the localization accuracy by 18% in comparison to 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi-only approach. Additional signals would improve the accuracy even further. We have shown that MFAM provides better accuracy than competing methods, while having several advantages for real-world usage

    A self-adaptive model-based Wi-Fi indoor localization method

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    This paper presents a novel method for indoor localization, developed with the main aim of making it useful for real-world deployments. Many indoor localization methods exist, yet they have several disadvantages in real-world deploymentsā€”some are static, which is not suitable for long-term usagesome require costly human recalibration proceduresand others require special hardware such as Wi-Fi anchors and transponders. Our method is self-calibrating and self-adaptive thus maintenance free and based on Wi-Fi only. We have employed two well-known propagation modelsā€”free space path loss and ITU modelsā€”which we have extended with additional parameters for better propagation simulation. Our self-calibrating procedure utilizes one propagation model to infer parameters of the space and the other to simulate the propagation of the signal without requiring any additional hardware beside Wi-Fi access points, which is suitable for real-world usage. Our method is also one of the few model-based Wi-Fi only self-adaptive approaches that do not require the mobile terminal to be in the access-point mode. The only input requirements of the method are Wi-Fi access point positions, and positions and properties of the walls. Our method has been evaluated in single- and multi-room environments, with measured mean error of 2ā€“3 and 3ā€“4 m, respectively, which is similar to existing methods. The evaluation has proven that usable localization accuracy can be achieved in real-world environments solely by the proposed Wi-Fi method that relies on simple hardware and software requirements

    MFAM

    Full text link
    This paper presents MFAM (Multiple Frequency Adaptive Model-based localization method), a novel model-based indoor localization method that is capable of using multiple wireless signal frequencies simultaneously. It utilizes indoor architectural model and physical properties of wireless signal propagation through objects and space. The motivation for developing multiple frequency localization method lies in the future Wi-Fi standards (e.g., 802.11ah) and the growing number of various wireless signals present in the buildings (e.g., Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, ZigBee, etc.). Current indoor localization methods mostly rely on a single wireless signal type and often require many devices to achieve the necessary accuracy. MFAM utilizes multiple wireless signal types and improves the localization accuracy over the usage of a single frequency. It continuously monitors signal propagation through space and adapts the model according to the changes indoors. Using multiple signal sources lowers the required number of access points for a specific signal type while utilizing signals, already present in the indoors. Due to the unavailability of the 802.11ah hardware, we have evaluated proposed method with similar signalswe have used 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi and 868 MHz HomeMatic home automation signals. We have performed the evaluation in a modern two-bedroom apartment and measured mean localization error 2.0 to 2.3 m and median error of 2.0 to 2.2 m. Based on our evaluation results, using two different signals improves the localization accuracy by 18% in comparison to 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi-only approach. Additional signals would improve the accuracy even further. We have shown that MFAM provides better accuracy than competing methods, while having several advantages for real-world usage
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