DocumentCode
1903156
Title
On the calibration and performance of RSS-based localization methods
Author
Dil, B.J. ; Havinga, P.J.M.
Author_Institution
Pervasive Syst., Univ. of Twente, Enschede, Netherlands
fYear
2010
fDate
Nov. 29 2010-Dec. 1 2010
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
8
Abstract
This paper analyzes the performance of several Received Signal Strength (RSS) based localization methods as a function of the calibration effort, hence as a function of deployment and maintenance costs. The deployment and maintenance costs determine the scalability and thus the applicability of a localization algorithm, and this is still a topic of research. This paper analyzes and compares the best available localization algorithms of the following localization methods: fingerprinting-, range- and proximity-based localization. An extensive amount of RSS measurements, performed in a realistic indoor environment show that range-based algorithms outperform fingerprinting-and proximity-based localization algorithms when there is a limited amount of calibration measurements available. In that case, range-based algorithms have ~ 30% smaller errors, ~ 1.3 meter compared to ~ 1.9 meter. Our measurements show that fingerprinting-based algorithms approximate the performance of range-based algorithms as the number of calibration measurements increases from 1 to 80.
Keywords
calibration; indoor communication; mobile communication; signal processing; RSS based localization method; deployment cost; fingerprinting; indoor environment; maintenance cost; proximity-based localization; range-based localization; received signal strength; Accuracy; Approximation algorithms; Calibration; Frequency measurement; Hardware; Shadow mapping; Temperature measurement;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Internet of Things (IOT), 2010
Conference_Location
Tokyo
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-7413-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IOT.2010.5678435
Filename
5678435
Link To Document