DocumentCode :
968694
Title :
Vehicular Node Localization Using Received-Signal-Strength Indicator
Author :
Parker, Ryan ; Valaee, Shahrokh
Author_Institution :
Microsoft, Redmond
Volume :
56
Issue :
6
fYear :
2007
Firstpage :
3371
Lastpage :
3380
Abstract :
Vehicle-to-vehicle communications via dedicated-short-range-communication (DSRC) devices will enable safety applications such as cooperative collision warning. These devices use the IEEE 802.11p standard to support low-latency vehicle-to-vehicle and vehicle-to-infrastructure communications. However, a major challenge for the cooperative collision warning is to accurately determine the location of vehicles. In this paper, we present a novel cooperative-vehicle-position-estimation algorithm which can achieve a higher accuracy and more reliability than the existing global-positioning-system-based positioning solutions by making use of intervehicle-distance measurements taken by a radio-ranging technique. Our algorithm uses signal-strength-based intervehicle-distance measurements, vehicle kinematics, and road maps to estimate the relative positions of vehicles in a cluster. We have analyzed our algorithm by examining its performance-bound, computational-complexity, and communication-overhead requirements. In addition, we have shown that the accuracy of our algorithm is superior to previously proposed localization algorithms.
Keywords :
alarm systems; computational complexity; distance measurement; mobile radio; radionavigation; road accidents; road safety; road traffic; traffic engineering computing; vehicle dynamics; wireless LAN; IEEE 802.11p standard; cooperative collision warning system; cooperative-vehicle-position-estimation algorithm; dedicated-short-range-communication devices; intervehicle-distance measurements; performance-bound computational-complexity; radio-ranging technique; received-signal-strength indicator; road maps; vehicle kinematics; vehicle-to-infrastructure communications; vehicle-to-vehicle communications; vehicular node localization; Clustering algorithms; Collision avoidance; Communication standards; Position measurement; Road safety; Road vehicles; Safety devices; Vehicle driving; Vehicle safety; Wireless communication; Dedicated short-range communication (DSRC); IEEE802.11p; localization; position estimation; vehicular networks; wireless access in vehicular environment; wireless communication;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Vehicular Technology, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9545
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TVT.2007.907687
Filename :
4378492
Link To Document :
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