Title :
Lazy inference on object identities in wireless sensor networks
Author :
Shin, Jaewon ; Lee, Nelson ; Thrun, Sebastian ; Guibas, Leonidas
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Stanford Univ., CA, USA
Abstract :
Maintaining the identities of moving objects is an important aspect of most multi-object tracking applications. Uncertainty in sensor data, coupled with the intrinsic combinatorial difficulty of the data association problem, suggests probabilistic formulations over the set of possible identities. While an explicit representation of a distribution over all associations may require exponential storage and computation, in practice the information provided by this distribution is accessed only in certain stylized ways, as when asking for the identity of a given track, or the track with a given identity. Exploiting this observation, we proposed a practical solution to this problem based on maintaining marginal probabilities and demonstrated its effectiveness in the context of tracking within a wireless sensor network. That method, unfortunately, requires extensive communication in the network whenever new identity observations are made, in order for normalization operations to keep the marginals consistent. In this paper, we have proposed a very different solution based on accumulated log-likelihoods that can postpone all normalization computations until actual identity queries are made. In this manner the continuous communication and computational expense of repeated normalizations is avoided and that effort is expended only when actual queries are made of the network. We compare the two methods in terms of their computational complexities, inference accuracies, and distributed implementations. Simulation and experimental results from a RFID system are also presented.
Keywords :
computational complexity; inference mechanisms; probabilistic logic; probability; query processing; radiofrequency identification; wireless sensor networks; RFID system; computational complexity; data association problem; distributed implementation; exponential storage; inference accuracy; marginal probability maintenance; multiobject tracking application; normalization operation; probabilistic formulation; wireless sensor network; Application software; Chemical sensors; Computer science; Condition monitoring; Distributed computing; Identity management systems; Intelligent networks; Sensor phenomena and characterization; Uncertainty; Wireless sensor networks;
Conference_Titel :
Information Processing in Sensor Networks, 2005. IPSN 2005. Fourth International Symposium on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-9201-9
DOI :
10.1109/IPSN.2005.1440922