DocumentCode
3092449
Title
Distributed state representation for tracking problems in sensor networks
Author
Liu, Juan ; Chu, Maurice ; Jie Liu ; Reich, Jim ; Zhao, Feng
Author_Institution
Palo Alto Reserach Center, CA, USA
fYear
2004
fDate
26-27 April 2004
Firstpage
234
Lastpage
242
Abstract
This paper investigates the problem of designing decentralized representations to support monitoring and inferences in sensor networks. State-space models of physical phenomena such as those arising from tracking multiple interacting targets, while commonly used in signal processing and control, suffer from the curse of dimensionality as the number of phenomena of interest increases. Furthermore, mapping an inference algorithm onto a distributed sensor network must appropriately allocate scarce sensing and communication resources. We address the state-space explosion problem by developing a distributed state-space model that switches between factored and joint state spaces as appropriate. We develop a collaborative group abstraction as a mechanism to effectively support the information flow within and across subspaces of the state-space model, which can be efficiently supported in a communication-constrained network. The approach has been implemented and demonstrated in a simulation of tracking multiple interacting targets.
Keywords
ad hoc networks; groupware; sensor fusion; state-space methods; target tracking; wireless sensor networks; ad hoc network; communication resources; communication-constrained network; decentralized representations; distributed state representation; distributed state-space model; group collaboration; inference algorithm; information system; joint state spaces; multiple interacting targets; multitarget tracking; physical phenomena; scarce sensing; sensor networks; signal processing; state-space explosion problem; state-space models; target localization; tracking problems; Communication system control; Explosions; Inference algorithms; Monitoring; Process control; Resource management; Sensor phenomena and characterization; Signal processing algorithms; Switches; Target tracking;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Information Processing in Sensor Networks, 2004. IPSN 2004. Third International Symposium on
Print_ISBN
1-58113-846-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IPSN.2004.1307343
Filename
1307343
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