DocumentCode :
3393430
Title :
Performance study of RSS-based location estimation techniques for wireless sensor networks
Author :
Li, Xinrong
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., North Texas Univ., Denton, TX
fYear :
2005
fDate :
17-20 Oct. 2005
Firstpage :
1064
Abstract :
Most sensors are event-driven and wireless sensor networks are mostly used for monitoring purposes in environmental monitoring, structural monitoring, and military battleground and public safety applications. As a result, there is a need to quickly and accurately pin-point a sensor´s location when it detects an emergent event. Since sensor networks are severely resource-constrained due to various physical and environmental constraints, including miniature size, limited battery power, and limited communicational and computational capacity, a low-complexity location estimation technique is needed. Several received-signal-strength (RSS) based techniques have been proposed as a low-cost, low-complexity solution for location estimation in wireless sensor networks, including the basic RSS location estimator and the RSS-UDPG location estimator in our earlier study, which jointly estimates location coordinates and the parameter of channel model, i.e., the distance-power gradient. In this paper we present a comparative study of these two location estimators based on computer simulations. It is shown that when the channel model is assumed known a priori, the two estimators have comparable performance, but RSS-UDPG is strongly preferred when the prior estimate of the channel model is inaccurate or when the channel characteristics tend to change, either accidentally or seasonally
Keywords :
channel estimation; monitoring; wireless sensor networks; channel estimation; environmental monitoring; event-driven sensors; low-complexity location estimation technique; military battleground; public safety applications; received-signal-strength based techniques; structural monitoring; wireless sensor networks; Batteries; Capacitive sensors; Computer networks; Computer simulation; Event detection; Military computing; Monitoring; Physics computing; Safety; Wireless sensor networks;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Military Communications Conference, 2005. MILCOM 2005. IEEE
Conference_Location :
Atlantic City, NJ
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-9393-7
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/MILCOM.2005.1605820
Filename :
1605820
Link To Document :
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