Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 14-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

Hybrid Indoor Human Localization System for Addressing the Issue of RSS Variation in Fingerprinting

Hybrid Indoor Human Localization System for Addressing the Issue of RSS Variation in Fingerprinting Hybrid Indoor Human Localization System for Addressing the Issue of RSS Variation in Fingerprinting div.banner_title_bkg div.trangle { border-color: #000000 transparent transparent transparent; opacity:0.65; /*new styles start*/ -ms-filter:"progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.Alpha(Opacity=65)" ;filter: alpha(opacity=65); /*new styles end*/ } div.banner_title_bkg_if div.trangle { border-color: transparent transparent #000000 transparent ; opacity:0.65; /*new styles start*/ -ms-filter:"progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.Alpha(Opacity=65)" ;filter: alpha(opacity=65); /*new styles end*/ } div.banner_title_bkg div.trangle { width: 489px; }div.banner_title_bkg_if div.trangle { width: 202px; } #banner { background-image: url('http://images.hindawi.com/journals/ijdsn/ijdsn.banner.jpg'); background-position: 50% 0;} Hindawi Publishing Corporation Home Journals About Us International Journal of Distributed Sensor Networks Impact Factor 0.923 About this Journal Submit a Manuscript Table of Contents Journal Menu About this Journal · Abstracting and Indexing · Advance Access · Aims and Scope · Annual Issues · Article Processing Charges · Articles in Press · Author Guidelines · Bibliographic Information · Citations to this Journal · Contact Information · Editorial Board · Editorial Workflow · Free eTOC Alerts · Publication Ethics · Reviewers Acknowledgment · Submit a Manuscript · Subscription Information · Table of Contents Open Special Issues · Published Special Issues · Special Issue Guidelines Abstract Full-Text PDF Full-Text HTML Full-Text ePUB Linked References How to Cite this Article Complete Special Issue International Journal of Distributed Sensor Networks Volume 2015 (2015), Article ID 831423, 9 pages http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2015/831423 Research Article Hybrid Indoor Human Localization System for Addressing the Issue of RSS Variation in Fingerprinting Mekuanint Agegnehu Bitew , 1 Rong-Shue Hsiao , 1 Hsin-Piao Lin , 1,2 and Ding-Bing Lin 1,2 1 Department of Electronic Engineering, National Taipei University of Technology, Taipei 10608, Taiwan 2 Department of Communication Engineering, National Taipei University, New Taipei City 23741, Taiwan Received 26 June 2014; Revised 2 November 2014; Accepted 6 November 2014 Academic Editor: Miao Pan Copyright © 2015 Mekuanint Agegnehu Bitew et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Abstract Indoor localization is used in many applications like security, healthcare, location based services, and social networking. Fingerprinting-based methods are widely used for indoor localization. But received signal strength (RSS) variation due to device diversity and change of conditions in the localization environment (e.g., distribution of furniture, people presence and movement, and opening and closing of doors) induce a significant localization error. To overcome this, we propose a hybrid indoor localization system using radio frequency (RF) and pyroelectric infrared (PIR) sensors. Our localization system has two stages. In the first stage, the zone of the target person is identified by PIR sensors. In the second stage, we apply K -nearest neighbor ( K -NN) algorithm to the fingerprints within the zone identified and estimate position. Zone based processing of fingerprints will exclude deviated fingerprints because of RSS variation. We proposed two localization methods: Proposed_1 and Proposed_2 which use signal strength difference (SSD) and RSS, respectively. Simulation results show that the 0.8-meter accuracy of Proposed_1 achieves 84% and Proposed_2 achieves 65%, while traditional fingerprinting and SSD are 46% and 28%, respectively. 1. Introduction Localization is an important technology for pervasive computing. Global positioning system (GPS) is advantageous in terms of positioning accuracy and reliability in outdoor environments. But GPS is not working properly in indoor environments due to lack of line of sight between the satellites and the receiver. Hence, infrared, RF, and ultrasound signals are commonly used in indoor localizations systems. Indoor localization systems can be classified in two based on the need of a terminal that should be carried by the target person: terminal-based and nonterminal-based [ 1 ]. In terminal-based systems, the location of the target person is determined indirectly from the location of the device carried by him/her. In these methods, it is impossible to locate a person if he/she does not carry a device, whereas, nonterminal-based methods determine location of a person who do not carry device. One technique in nonterminal-based methods is using PIR sensors [ 1 , 2 ]. PIR sensors are very inexpensive sensors that detect the nearby presence of a warm body, for example, a human within its sensing region. When a PIR sensor detects an existence of a person within its detecting region, the center of this region is taken as the location of a person. This may result a maximum localization error equal to the radius of its detection region. And also, PIR sensor system localizations have disadvantage on multiple target identification. RF-based localizations use RSS of packets sent by wireless devices available in the environment to perform localization. Specialized hardware is not needed to measure RSS, it can be directly measured from wireless card. Generally, RF-based localization systems can be classified in to two: propagation model based methods and fingerprinting-based methods [ 3 ]. Propagation model based methods use mathematical models to predict the distance between transmitter and receiver based on the power with which a packet sent by a transmitter reaches the receiver. From this information, it is possible to estimate the position of the receiver by geometric computations (e.g., trilateration). The major drawback of propagation model based methods is that the models used do not always hold in indoor environments due to phenomena like multipath fading and shadowing [ 4 ]. This has a significant effect on the accuracy of the localization system. The second type of RF-based methods is fingerprinting-based methods which require two phases: online phase and offline phase [ 5 ]. During the offline phase, RSS values are collected from sample locations and stored in database. In the online phase, RSS vector at physical position of the target object is compared with the fingerprints in the database. Finally, position of the target is estimated based on the entries in the database that best matches the online RSS measurement. Fingerprinting-based methods provide a better accuracy than propagation model-based methods even though collecting fingerprints to create a database is time-consuming [ 3 ]. Although fingerprinting-based methods show a great promise for indoor localization, RSS variation due to device diversity [ 6 – 11 ] and change of conditions in the environment [ 12 – 14 ] induce a significant localization error. In this study, we have proposed a hybrid (PIR sensors and RF) indoor localization system to overcome error induced in fingerprinting due RSS variation. Our system operation consists of two stages. First, the zone of the target person is identified by PIR sensors. Secondly, RF fingerprint values within the identified zone will be processed to estimate the final position of the person. Zone based processing of fingerprints will help us exclude deviated fingerprints because of device diversity or change of conditions in the environment. The rest of the paper is organized as follows. In Section 2 , we provide a brief discussion to related works. Section 3 presents problem definition. Section 4 describes our localization approach using PIR sensors and RF. Section 5 presents performance evaluation of our work and Section 6 concludes the paper. 2. Related Works There are lots of researches done in indoor localization systems based on RF signals. A survey of wireless indoor positioning techniques has been presented in detail in [ 3 , 4 ]. Various measuring principles and algorithms have been presented in [ 4 ]. It has been mentioned that the time based location methods are not suitable in nonline of sight (NLOS) conditions and RSS is referred in NLOS conditions. In [ 12 ], variation of received signal strength due environmental factors is discussed. This study considered the influence of temperature, height of node’s position, type of antenna, and the electromagnetic influence of the human body on the RSS. According to their investigation, a human body at a distance of 5 meters can cause RSS fluctuation of −3.0 3.0 dBm. The variation of RSS due to the presence of obstacles is presented in [ 13 ]. The authors investigated the attenuation of RSS over different distances in both line of sight and nonline of sight environments. Finally, the authors conclude that RSS alone could not be used to accurately locate mobile nodes in an indoor environment with obstacles. Fingerprinting-based methods which combine Wi-Fi with ZigBee or Bluetooth are proposed in [ 15 , 16 ]. In such kind of combination, probability of signal interference is very high because of all the three technologies operate in the same frequency, 2.4 GHz. Results in [ 15 ] show that the combination of the three technologies perform weaker than when the Wi-Fi is combined with ZigBee or Bluetooth because of interference. In addition, the effect of device diversity, which is commonly encountered in Wi-Fi, is not addressed in [ 15 ]. A positioning scheme which aims at optimizing indoor fingerprinting systems is proposed in [ 17 ]. According to this scheme, indoor fingerprinting systems can be optimized based on the systems operating parameters such as the number of access points (Aps), the geometry of APs, arrangement of RPs, and the number of RSS samples. In [ 18 – 20 ], Wi-Fi positioning is combined with pedestrian dead reckoning (PDR) systems. A combination of these complementary technologies overcomes the fluctuation of RSS-based Wi-Fi positioning due to the fluctuation of RSSs and the accumulation of error over time in PDR system. As WiFi signals vary significantly over time and are susceptible to human presence, multipath, and fading due to the high operating frequency, fingerprinting of FM signals is used in [ 14 , 21 ]. Since FM signals vary less, localization accuracy is improved when FM and WiFi signals are combined to generate fingerprints. However, there are challenges when employing FM signals. The most crucial challenge is that FM signal does not carry any timing information, which is a critical factor in range calculation. Moreover, the accuracy of navigation using FM signals could be degraded, similarly to most radionavigation systems, by the effects of multipath especially for indoor areas [ 21 ]. An enhanced positioning trilateration algorithm for human body implant localization is proposed in [ 22 ]. The algorithm has two stages. In the first stage, three most suitable reference nodes are selected from all reference nodes within the range using optimization algorithm. In the second stage, position of a node whose location is unknown is estimated by means of adaptive geometric algorithm. The positioning environment of this algorithm, implants in a human body, is quite different from indoor or outdoor systems. Trilateration positioning schemes are more suitable than fingerprinting for positioning implants in human body, but fingerprinting methods provide better accuracy for indoor positioning [ 3 ]. RSS variation due to device heterogeneity occurs when a user’s device and a system configured device are different [ 6 ]. Average RSS variation due to Wi-Fi devices heterogeneity may exceed 18 dBm [ 7 ]. Another experiment done in [ 8 ] supports this result. Different localization methods are proposed in the literatures to address this issue [ 6 – 11 ]. SSD uses the difference of signal strength as a location fingerprint [ 8 ]. It is a robust location fingerprint when heterogeneous devices are used. Although SSD address the issue of device heterogeneity very well, it has drawbacks. The first drawback of SSD is the effect of shadowing variation. If the shadowing variance is in RSS, the shadowing variance in SSD is . The second drawback of SSD is the number of fingerprint vectors. The number of SSD fingerprint vectors is one less than the RSS fingerprint vector for the same number of APs. This will have a significant of localization error when the mobile device don not detect some of the APs because of obstacles or other reasons. Hyperbolic location fingerprinting (HLF) is proposed to overcome the device-diversity issue without manual calibration [ 9 , 10 ]. Here, fingerprints are recorded as the RSS ratio between pairs of APs rather than as absolute RSS values. Rank based fingerprinting algorithm which uses rank of the APs based on RSS values is proposed in [ 11 ]. This algorithm is based on the assumption that the rank of a given AP will be less affected due to device change compared to measured RSS value. Performance comparison between the two calibration free techniques HLF and SSD is done in [ 23 ]. It is shown that the two techniques perform almost the same. Although the issue of device diversity is addressed in [ 6 – 11 ], the performance of these schemes suffers from RSS variation due to change of environmental conditions. An indoor human/robot localization and monitoring system based on PIR sensors and RF is proposed in [ 2 ]. This method fuses the location information obtained from PIR and RF propagation model. From RF propagation model, position of the target is estimated and it is assumed to be distributed in some probable region. The authors use Cramer-Rao bound (CRB) to determine the probable region. The intersection region of the probable region (from CRB) and the sensing area of a PIR sensor that detects the target is the region in which the target is expected to be. Finally, the center of gravity for the intersection region is taken as the position of the target. Even though we use the same technology combination (RF and PIR sensors) as in [ 2 ], the issue we want to address is RSS variation in fingerprinting-based methods. We prefer fingerprinting than RF propagation model because fingerprinting-based methods provide better accuracy in indoor environments [ 3 ]. 3. Problem Definition Fingerprinting-based methods are widely used in indoor localization. These methods require two phases: online phase and offline phase. During the offline phase, RSS values are collected from sample locations and stored in database. In the online phase, RSS vector at physical position of the target object is compared with the fingerprints in the database. Position of the target is estimated based on the entries in the database that best matches the online RSS measurement. Since fingerprinting-based methods require two stages, the accuracy of these methods is significantly affected by RSS variation; that is, RSS vectors collected during the online phase are different from those collected during the offline phase even though the positions of the transmitter and receiver remains the same. This RSS variation is caused by device diversity [ 9 , 10 ] and change of conditions in the environment (e.g., distribution of furniture, people presence and movement, and opening and closing of doors) [ 5 ]. RSS variation due device diversity occurs when the device used in online phase is different from the device used in offline phase, [ 6 ]. Heterogeneous devices measure signal strength differently. In [ 7 ], an experiment is done to compare RSS of notebook and smartphone from the same location and at the same Wi-Fi AP. As shown from the results, the average RSS value from notebook is −47.6 dBm whereas from the smartphone is −66.2 dBm. A similar experiment done in [ 8 ] also supports this result. These experiments indicate that device heterogeneity has a serious impact on the accuracy of fingerprinting based systems and it can make room-size accuracy [ 9 ]. In addition to devices diversity, environment conditions like distribution of furniture, people presence and movement, and opening and closing of doors will not be the same in the two phases of fingerprinting. Hence, change of environmental conditions in the localization environment cause a considerable RSS variation [ 12 , 13 ]. To overcome localization error induced due to RSS variation, we have proposed a hybrid indoor localization system based on PIR sensors and RF. Our system operation consists of two stages. First, the zone of the target person is identified by PIR sensors. Secondly, RF fingerprints within the identified zone will be processed to estimate the final position of the person. Zone based processing of fingerprints help us to exclude deviated fingerprints caused by device diversity or change of conditions in the environment. 4. Methodology In this section, we provide a detailed description of the two stages of our localization system. The entire localization process is shown in Figure 1 . Figure 1: Localization process of our hybrid system. 4.1. Zone Identification by PIR Sensors PIR sensors detect the electromagnetic radiations emitted by persons when they move through each sensor’s field of view. A PIR sensor produces an ON signal when a person enters its sensing region and the center of this sensor is taken as the position the person. The output of a PIR sensor is characterized by the magnitude of the observed voltage. To capture RSS variation, we use a Bayesian classifier with Gaussian probability density function to classify the output voltage to in to three classes: , as shown in Figure 2 . The probability of a class when voltage of magnitude at the th cycle observed is given by where is , or , is the posterior probability of that depends on the value of , is the conditional probability of given , is the a priori probability of class , and is the a priori probability of that acts as a normalizing constant [ 24 ]. To determine the class to which the observed voltage belongs, we choose the class that has the maximum posterior probability for a given . Figure 2: Three classes of PIR sensor voltage output. We arranged four PIR sensors as indicated in Figure 3 and thirteen zones of different areas are created. For example, the five zones formed by PIR sensors A and B are , , , , and . For simplicity, at maximum two boundary regions will overlap and create zones when multiple sensors are deployed. Figure 3: Zones formed by four PIR sensors A, B, C, and D. After the output pattern of a PIR sensor is determined using a Bayesian classifier, the zone of the target person is estimated by processing multiple sensors’ report on the output pattern classification. When four PIR sensors are placed as in Figure 3 , we will have four possible options to determine the zone of the person. The four options are as follows. (1) From the four PIR sensors, one sensor classify the observed voltage to be in (the person is in its inside area). Hence, the zone identified for the next localization stage is , , or depending on which PIR sensor classifies the output voltage to be in . (2) Only one sensor classify the output voltage to be in . Here, the zone identified will be , , , or . (3) Two sensors classify the output voltage to be in . In this case, the identified zone will be the intersection region of the two boundary areas. (4) If all PIR sensors classify the observed voltage to be in , the area outside all PIR sensors coverage is the proposed zone for the next localization stage. 4.2. RF Localization This is the second stage of our localization system in which we apply -NN [ 25 ] algorithm to the fingerprints which are in the zone identified by PIR sensors. Two fingerprinting databases were created during the offline phase: one with RSS and the other with SSD. We proposed two localization methods, which corresponds to the databases created. The first is Proposed_1 which uses the database created based on SSD and the second is Proposed_2 which uses the database created with RSS. The detailed description on the creation of the two databases is presented below. Log-normal shadowing model is used to measure RSS at a distance from the transmitter, [ 26 ]. The received signal strength (in dBm) at distance (in meter) from the transmitter ( ) is given by where is the signal strength at the close-in reference distance from the transmitter, is the path loss exponent, and represents a Gaussian random variable with zero mean and standard deviation of dB [ 26 ]. The received signal strength at the reference distance , , using free space propagation model [ 17 ] is given by where is the transmission power, is the transmitter antenna gain, is the receiver antenna gain, is the wavelength of the transmitted wave signal, is the close-in reference distance from the transmitter, and is the system loss factor. The database created with RSS has the form , where is the zone of the fingerprint, is the location of the fingerprint, is RSS from AP i for location , is the number of AP’s, is the number of zones, and is the number of locations selected to collect fingerprints in each zone. Table 1 indicates the structure of our database created with RSS. Table 1: Database structure. From ( 2 ), the two terms which will bring RSS variation at a fixed distance are and . The variation of is due to hardware specific parameters like antenna gain. Even devices from the same vendor have different hardware specific parameters. This indicates that RSS is device dependent. To address the issue of device diversity in fingerprinting-based methods, creating fingerprint database using signal strength difference (SSD) is promising than absolute received signal strength. We proposed the idea of signal strength difference for mobile location in [ 27 ] and this idea has been recently used for indoor localization in [ 8 ]. SSD uses the difference of signal strengths received at the AP’s as a location fingerprint, ( 6 ). To describe SSD, let the transmitters be wireless APs with the same , and the receiver is a device carried by the target person. Let and denote RSSs by a mobile device from two APs at distances and with antenna gains and , respectively. Using ( 2 ) and ( 3 ), and can be expressed as Subtracting ( 4 ) from ( 5 ), we get As shown in ( 6 ), SSD is free from the receiver’s hardware specific parameter . This makes SSD a robust location fingerprint in device heterogeneity. The database created with SSD has the form , where and the other notations are similar with the database created with RSS. But the shadowing variance in SSD is much greater than in RSS. Because if and are two independent and identically distributed Gaussian random variables with mean zero and variance , then is a zero mean Gaussian random variable with variance . In the online phase, we apply -NN algorithm to the fingerprints which are inside the zone identified at the first stage by PIR sensors. The -NN algorithm is used to choose closer locations to the tested point. The closeness metric is a distance measurement in signal space. We calculate mean of the closer locations and take it as the estimated position of the test point. 5. Performance Evaluation In this section, we discuss the performance of the proposed localization methods. We used C++ to conduct simulations. Our proposed methods, Proposed_1 and Proposed_2, are compared with SSD [ 8 ] and traditional fingerprinting methods [ 5 ]. 5.1. Simulation Environment We consider a square localization field of 15 m × 15 m area. Four AP’s (at each corner) and four PIR sensors (at the center of the circles) are placed in the field as shown in Figure 4 . The localization field is divided in to square grids of size 0.6 m × 0.6 m and RF fingerprint are collected at the center of each grid. A total of 625 fingerprints (training points) are collected. For RSS measurement, we adopt the log-normal shadowing model [ 26 ], ( 7 ). In this model, the received power (in dBm) at a distance (in meter) from the transmitter is given by where is the transmission power, is the transmitter antenna gain, is the receiver antenna gain, is the transmitted carriers wavelength, is the close-in reference distance, is the system loss factor, is the path loss exponent, and represents a Gaussian random variable with zero mean and standard deviation of dB. Figure 4: Simulation environment. We assume the transmitters to be the four AP’s and have the same hardware specification and transmission power . To check the effect of device diversity, both of our databases are created (offline phase) with dBi and during the online phase dBi. The detailed simulation parameters are shown in Table 2 . Table 2: Simulation parameters. For PIR sensors voltage output, we generate a random number with Gaussian distribution of mean , and for the inside, boundary and outside area of PIR sensors, respectively. We set because the output voltage of a PIR sensor when a person enters its sensing area is inversely proportional to the distance between its center and the detected person. A total of 200 test points are selected from the inside and boundary areas of the four PIR sensors. We tried our best to make the test points distributed uniformly in the boundary and inside areas of PIR sensors. We did not include test points from the outside area of PIR sensors because arrangement of multiple PIR sensors as in Figure 4 will leave a negligible uncovered area by the sensors. 5.2. Results and Discussion In order to evaluate the performance our schemes, we compared our proposed schemes (Proposed_1 and Proposed_2) with SSD [ 8 ] and fingerprinting (traditional fingerprinting) [ 2 ]. We created two fingerprinting databases: one with RSS and the other with signal strength difference. Proposed_1 and SSD schemes use the database created with SSD, while Proposed_2 and fingerprinting use the database crated with RSS. For both of our proposed schemes, one column is added in the database to indicate zone of the fingerprint. A detailed description for databases is given in Section 4.2 . We considered localization error to investigate the performance the schemes. Localization error, , is given by where represents the real position and represents the estimated position. Figure 5(a) shows the cumulative distribution function of location error when the devices used in online phase and offline phase are different and the standard deviation for shadowing . Here, both device diversity and shadowing will cause RSS variation. The 0.8-meter accuracy of Proposed_1 achieves 84% and Proposed_2 achieves 65%, while fingerprinting and SSD are 46% and 28%, respectively. Our proposed methods outperform SSD and fingerprinting because the outlier fingerprints, fingerprints from a different zone of the test point, are excluded in the position estimation process. But for fingerprinting scheme, outlier fingerprints caused by device diversity and shadowing increase the localization error. The shadowing variance for SSD scheme is twice of the fingerprinting scheme. Hence, even though the issue of devices diversity is addressed in SSD scheme, its performance highly depends on the value of shadowing standard deviation. This is why the 0.8-meter accuracy of fingerprinting scheme is better than SSD when the standard deviation of shadowing becomes 3 dB. Figure 5: Cumulative distribution of error for Proposed_1, Proposed_2, SSD, and fingerprinting; (a) different devices and ; (b) different devices and ; (c) different devices and shadowing free; (d) homogeneous devices and . When the shadowing standard deviation is decreased to 2 dB, the 0.8-meter accuracy of Proposed_1 achieves 97%, SSD achieves 94%, Proposed_2 achieves 72%, and fingerprinting achieves 66%, Figure 5(b) . The performance of all schemes increases as shadowing standard deviation decreases from 3 dB to 2 dB. A decrease of shadowing standard deviation with 1 dB increase the performance of SSD scheme by 66%, but the performance increase of the other schemes is much less than this value. This indicates that SSD scheme is highly affected by shadowing among the four schemes, whereas Proposed_1 selects -nearest fingerprints which are within the zone of the test point and excludes outlier fingerprints induced due to shadowing. The combined effect of shadowing and device diversity makes fingerprinting scheme perform worst among the four localization schemes. Even though the real environment is not absolutely free from shadowing, we took an assumption as there is no shadowing and compare the above four schemes, Figure 5(c) . Here, RSS variation comes from only device diversity. In this case, SSD outperforms all other schemes followed by Proposed_1. SSD outperforms Proposed_1 because the proposed method always select fingerprints which are within the zone of the test point and excludes fingerprints which are in a different zone even the fingerprints are closer to the test point. Such kind of excluding fingerprints increase localization error in Proposed_1 scheme when the test point is closer to the boundary of the zone. But in SSD, fingerprints which are closer to the test point are selected without considering zone of the fingerprints. However, as the real world is not free from shadowing, excluding such kind of fingerprints when the test point closer boundary of zone has less effect as compared to the effect of shadowing and device diversity. Even though Proposed_2 and fingerprinting schemes use the same fingerprint database, Proposed_2 outperforms fingerprinting because the effect of RSS variation due to device diversity in fingerprinting scheme is higher than in Proposed_2. Figure 5(d) indicates cumulative distribution of localization error when similar devices are used during offline phase (database creation) and online phase (testing phase). In this case, the cause of RSS variation is only shadowing. Since the shadowing variance of SSD ( dB) is much greater than that of fingerprinting shadowing variance (= 9 dB), SSD is highly affected by shadowing among the four schemes and it performs worst. Both of our proposed schemes outperform SSD and fingerprinting. To generalize, the real localization environment is not free from shadowing and devices are heterogeneous. SSD addresses the issue of device diversity in fingerprinting but the effect of shadowing in SSD is higher than the effect in traditional fingerprinting scheme. Our proposed schemes address the issue of RSS variation independent of the cause of RSS variation: device diversity, shadowing, or any other. 6. Conclusion We have proposed a hybrid indoor human localization system based on RF and PIR sensors to address the issue of device diversity and shadowing in fingerprinting-based methods. Our system has two stages. In the first stage, the zone of the target person is identified by PIR sensors. In the second stage, we apply -NN algorithm to the fingerprints within the identified to estimate the position of the person. The purpose of processing fingerprints based on zone is to exclude outlier fingerprints due to device diversity or shadowing. Simulation results show that our proposed schemes outperform SSD and fingerprinting schemes when there is device diversity and shadowing. When the shadowing standard deviation and different devices are used for offline and online phase, the 0.8-meter accuracy of Proposed_1 achieves 84% and Poposed_2 65%, while fingerprinting and SSD are 46% and 28%, respectively. Conflict of Interests The authors declare that there is no conflict of interests regarding the publication of this paper. References H. H. Kim, K. N. Ha, S. Lee, and K. C. Lee, “Resident location-recognition algorithm using a Bayesian classifier in the PIR sensor-based indoor location-aware system,” IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man and Cybernetics Part C: Applications and Reviews , vol. 39, no. 2, pp. 240–245, 2009. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus R. C. Luo and O. Chen, “Wireless and pyroelectric sensory fusion system for indoor human/robot localization and monitoring,” IEEE/ASME Transactions on Mechatronics , vol. 18, no. 3, pp. 845–853, 2013. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus Y. Gu, A. Lo, and I. Niemegeers, “A survey of indoor positioning systems for wireless personal networks,” IEEE Communications Surveys and Tutorials , vol. 11, no. 1, pp. 13–32, 2009. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus H. Liu, H. Darabi, P. Banerjee, and J. Liu, “Survey of wireless indoor positioning techniques and systems,” IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man and Cybernetics Part C: Applications and Reviews , vol. 37, no. 6, pp. 1067–1080, 2007. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus P. Bahl and V. Padmanabhan, “RADAR: an in-building RF-based user location and tracking system,” in Proceedings of the 19th Annual Joint Conference of the IEEE Computer and Communications Societies (IEEE/INFOCOM '00) , vol. 2, pp. 775–784, IEEE, Tel Aviv, Israel, 2000. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar J. G. Park, D. Curtis, S. Teller, and J. Ledlie, “Implications of device diversity for organic localization,” in Proceedings of the IEEE INFOCOM 2011 , pp. 3182–3190, April 2011. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus C.-H. Wang, T.-W. Kao, S.-H. Fang et al., “Robust Wi-Fi location fingerprinting against device diversity based on spatial mean normalization,” in Proceedings of the IEEE Asia-Pacific Signal and Information Processing Association Annual Summit and Conference (APSIPA '13) , pp. 1–4, November 2013. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus A. K. M. Mahtab Hossain, Y. Jin, W.-S. Soh, and H. N. Van, “SSD: a robust RF location fingerprint addressing mobile devices' heterogeneity,” IEEE Transactions on Mobile Computing , vol. 12, no. 1, pp. 65–77, 2013. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus M. B. Kjærgaard, “Indoor location fingerprinting with heterogeneous clients,” Pervasive and Mobile Computing , vol. 7, no. 1, pp. 31–43, 2011. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus M. B. Kjærgaard and C. V. Munk, “Hyperbolic location fingerprinting: a calibration-free solution for handling differences in signal strength,” in Proceedings of the 6th Annual IEEE International Conference on Pervasive Computing and Communications (PerCom '08) , pp. 110–116, March 2008. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus J. MacHaj and P. Brida, “Optimization of rank based fingerprinting localization algorithm,” in Proceedings of the International Conference on Indoor Positioning and Indoor Navigation (IPIN '12) , pp. 1–7, Sydney, Australia, November 2012. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus L. Xu, F. Yang, Y. Jiang, L. Zhang, C. Feng, and N. Bao, “Variation of received signal strength in wireless sensor network,” in Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Advanced Computer Control (ICACC '11) , pp. 151–154, Harbin, China, January 2011. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar K. Subaashini, G. Dhivya, and R. Pitchiah, “Zigbee RF signal strength for indoor location sensing—experiments and results,” in Proceedings of the 14th International Conference on Advanced Communication Technology, ICACT 2012 , pp. 12–17, February 2012. View at Scopus Y. Chen, D. Lymberopoulos, J. Liu, and B. Priyantha, “Indoor localization using FM signals,” IEEE Transactions on Mobile Computing , vol. 12, no. 8, pp. 1502–1517, 2013. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus M. L. Rodrigues, L. F. M. Vieira, and M. F. M. Campos, “Fingerprinting-based radio localization in indoor environments using multiple wireless technologies,” in Proceedings of the 22nd IEEE International Symposium on Personal, Indoor and Mobile Radio Communications (PIMRC '11) , pp. 1203–1207, September 2011. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus Y. Gao, J. Niu, R. Zhou, and G. Xing, “ZiFind: exploiting cross-technology interference signatures for energy-efficient indoor localization,” in Proceedings of the 32nd IEEE Conference on Computer Communications (INFOCOM '13) , pp. 2940–2948, April 2013. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus V. Moghtadaiee and A. G. Dempster, “Design protocol and performance analysis of indoor fingerprinting positioning systems,” Physical Communication , vol. 13, pp. 17–30, 2014. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus L.-H. Chen, E. H.-K. Wu, M.-H. Jin, and G.-H. Chen, “Intelligent fusion of Wi-Fi and inertial sensor-based positioning systems for indoor pedestrian navigation,” IEEE Sesnor Jornal , vol. 14, no. 11, pp. 4034–4042, 2014. View at Google Scholar Y. Kim, Y. Chon, and H. Cha, “Smartphone-based collaborative and autonomous radio fingerprinting,” IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man and Cybernetics Part C: Applications and Reviews , vol. 42, no. 1, pp. 112–122, 2012. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus F. Evennou and F. Marx, “Advanced integration of WiFi and inertial navigation systems for indoor mobile positioning,” EURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing , vol. 2006, Article ID 86706, 11 pages, 2006. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus V. Moghtadaiee and A. G. Dempster, “Indoor location fingerprinting using FM radio signals,” IEEE Transactions on Broadcasting , vol. 60, no. 2, pp. 336–346, 2014. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus P. Brida and J. MacHaj, “A novel enhanced positioning trilateration algorithm implemented for medical implant in-body localization,” International Journal of Antennas and Propagation , vol. 2013, Article ID 819695, 10 pages, 2013. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus S.-H. Fang, C.-H. Wang, S.-M. Chiou, and P. Lin, “Calibration-free approaches for robust Wi-Fi positioning against device diversity: a performance comparison,” in Proceedings of the IEEE 75th Vehicular Technology Conference (VTC Spring '12) , pp. 1–5, June 2012. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus R. O. Duda, P. E. Hart, and D. G. Stork, Pattern Classification , Wiley, 2001. View at MathSciNet K. Kaemarungsi, Design of indoor positioning systems based on location fingerprinting technique [Ph.D. dissertation] , University of Pittsburgh, 2005. T. S. Rappaport, Wireless Communications—Principles and Practice , Prentice Hall, 2002. D.-B. Lin, R.-T. Juang, and H.-P. Lin, “Robust mobile location estimation based on signal attenuation for cellular communication systems,” Electronics Letters , vol. 40, no. 25, pp. 1594–1596, 2004. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus (function (i, s, o, g, r, a, m) { i['GoogleAnalyticsObject'] = r; i[r] = i[r] || function () { (i[r].q = i[r].q || []).push(arguments) }, i[r].l = 1 * new Date(); a = s.createElement(o), m = s.getElementsByTagName(o)[0]; a.async = 1; a.src = g; m.parentNode.insertBefore(a, m) })(window, document, 'script', '//www.google-analytics.com/analytics.js', 'ga'); ga('create', 'UA-8578054-2', 'auto'); ga('send', 'pageview'); http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png International Journal of Distributed Sensor Networks Hindawi Publishing Corporation

Hybrid Indoor Human Localization System for Addressing the Issue of RSS Variation in Fingerprinting

Loading next page...
 
/lp/hindawi-publishing-corporation/hybrid-indoor-human-localization-system-for-addressing-the-issue-of-ruaAJzxozl

References

References for this paper are not available at this time. We will be adding them shortly, thank you for your patience.

Publisher
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
Copyright
Copyright © 2015 Mekuanint Agegnehu Bitew et al.
ISSN
1550-1329
eISSN
1550-1477
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Hybrid Indoor Human Localization System for Addressing the Issue of RSS Variation in Fingerprinting div.banner_title_bkg div.trangle { border-color: #000000 transparent transparent transparent; opacity:0.65; /*new styles start*/ -ms-filter:"progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.Alpha(Opacity=65)" ;filter: alpha(opacity=65); /*new styles end*/ } div.banner_title_bkg_if div.trangle { border-color: transparent transparent #000000 transparent ; opacity:0.65; /*new styles start*/ -ms-filter:"progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.Alpha(Opacity=65)" ;filter: alpha(opacity=65); /*new styles end*/ } div.banner_title_bkg div.trangle { width: 489px; }div.banner_title_bkg_if div.trangle { width: 202px; } #banner { background-image: url('http://images.hindawi.com/journals/ijdsn/ijdsn.banner.jpg'); background-position: 50% 0;} Hindawi Publishing Corporation Home Journals About Us International Journal of Distributed Sensor Networks Impact Factor 0.923 About this Journal Submit a Manuscript Table of Contents Journal Menu About this Journal · Abstracting and Indexing · Advance Access · Aims and Scope · Annual Issues · Article Processing Charges · Articles in Press · Author Guidelines · Bibliographic Information · Citations to this Journal · Contact Information · Editorial Board · Editorial Workflow · Free eTOC Alerts · Publication Ethics · Reviewers Acknowledgment · Submit a Manuscript · Subscription Information · Table of Contents Open Special Issues · Published Special Issues · Special Issue Guidelines Abstract Full-Text PDF Full-Text HTML Full-Text ePUB Linked References How to Cite this Article Complete Special Issue International Journal of Distributed Sensor Networks Volume 2015 (2015), Article ID 831423, 9 pages http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2015/831423 Research Article Hybrid Indoor Human Localization System for Addressing the Issue of RSS Variation in Fingerprinting Mekuanint Agegnehu Bitew , 1 Rong-Shue Hsiao , 1 Hsin-Piao Lin , 1,2 and Ding-Bing Lin 1,2 1 Department of Electronic Engineering, National Taipei University of Technology, Taipei 10608, Taiwan 2 Department of Communication Engineering, National Taipei University, New Taipei City 23741, Taiwan Received 26 June 2014; Revised 2 November 2014; Accepted 6 November 2014 Academic Editor: Miao Pan Copyright © 2015 Mekuanint Agegnehu Bitew et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Abstract Indoor localization is used in many applications like security, healthcare, location based services, and social networking. Fingerprinting-based methods are widely used for indoor localization. But received signal strength (RSS) variation due to device diversity and change of conditions in the localization environment (e.g., distribution of furniture, people presence and movement, and opening and closing of doors) induce a significant localization error. To overcome this, we propose a hybrid indoor localization system using radio frequency (RF) and pyroelectric infrared (PIR) sensors. Our localization system has two stages. In the first stage, the zone of the target person is identified by PIR sensors. In the second stage, we apply K -nearest neighbor ( K -NN) algorithm to the fingerprints within the zone identified and estimate position. Zone based processing of fingerprints will exclude deviated fingerprints because of RSS variation. We proposed two localization methods: Proposed_1 and Proposed_2 which use signal strength difference (SSD) and RSS, respectively. Simulation results show that the 0.8-meter accuracy of Proposed_1 achieves 84% and Proposed_2 achieves 65%, while traditional fingerprinting and SSD are 46% and 28%, respectively. 1. Introduction Localization is an important technology for pervasive computing. Global positioning system (GPS) is advantageous in terms of positioning accuracy and reliability in outdoor environments. But GPS is not working properly in indoor environments due to lack of line of sight between the satellites and the receiver. Hence, infrared, RF, and ultrasound signals are commonly used in indoor localizations systems. Indoor localization systems can be classified in two based on the need of a terminal that should be carried by the target person: terminal-based and nonterminal-based [ 1 ]. In terminal-based systems, the location of the target person is determined indirectly from the location of the device carried by him/her. In these methods, it is impossible to locate a person if he/she does not carry a device, whereas, nonterminal-based methods determine location of a person who do not carry device. One technique in nonterminal-based methods is using PIR sensors [ 1 , 2 ]. PIR sensors are very inexpensive sensors that detect the nearby presence of a warm body, for example, a human within its sensing region. When a PIR sensor detects an existence of a person within its detecting region, the center of this region is taken as the location of a person. This may result a maximum localization error equal to the radius of its detection region. And also, PIR sensor system localizations have disadvantage on multiple target identification. RF-based localizations use RSS of packets sent by wireless devices available in the environment to perform localization. Specialized hardware is not needed to measure RSS, it can be directly measured from wireless card. Generally, RF-based localization systems can be classified in to two: propagation model based methods and fingerprinting-based methods [ 3 ]. Propagation model based methods use mathematical models to predict the distance between transmitter and receiver based on the power with which a packet sent by a transmitter reaches the receiver. From this information, it is possible to estimate the position of the receiver by geometric computations (e.g., trilateration). The major drawback of propagation model based methods is that the models used do not always hold in indoor environments due to phenomena like multipath fading and shadowing [ 4 ]. This has a significant effect on the accuracy of the localization system. The second type of RF-based methods is fingerprinting-based methods which require two phases: online phase and offline phase [ 5 ]. During the offline phase, RSS values are collected from sample locations and stored in database. In the online phase, RSS vector at physical position of the target object is compared with the fingerprints in the database. Finally, position of the target is estimated based on the entries in the database that best matches the online RSS measurement. Fingerprinting-based methods provide a better accuracy than propagation model-based methods even though collecting fingerprints to create a database is time-consuming [ 3 ]. Although fingerprinting-based methods show a great promise for indoor localization, RSS variation due to device diversity [ 6 – 11 ] and change of conditions in the environment [ 12 – 14 ] induce a significant localization error. In this study, we have proposed a hybrid (PIR sensors and RF) indoor localization system to overcome error induced in fingerprinting due RSS variation. Our system operation consists of two stages. First, the zone of the target person is identified by PIR sensors. Secondly, RF fingerprint values within the identified zone will be processed to estimate the final position of the person. Zone based processing of fingerprints will help us exclude deviated fingerprints because of device diversity or change of conditions in the environment. The rest of the paper is organized as follows. In Section 2 , we provide a brief discussion to related works. Section 3 presents problem definition. Section 4 describes our localization approach using PIR sensors and RF. Section 5 presents performance evaluation of our work and Section 6 concludes the paper. 2. Related Works There are lots of researches done in indoor localization systems based on RF signals. A survey of wireless indoor positioning techniques has been presented in detail in [ 3 , 4 ]. Various measuring principles and algorithms have been presented in [ 4 ]. It has been mentioned that the time based location methods are not suitable in nonline of sight (NLOS) conditions and RSS is referred in NLOS conditions. In [ 12 ], variation of received signal strength due environmental factors is discussed. This study considered the influence of temperature, height of node’s position, type of antenna, and the electromagnetic influence of the human body on the RSS. According to their investigation, a human body at a distance of 5 meters can cause RSS fluctuation of −3.0 3.0 dBm. The variation of RSS due to the presence of obstacles is presented in [ 13 ]. The authors investigated the attenuation of RSS over different distances in both line of sight and nonline of sight environments. Finally, the authors conclude that RSS alone could not be used to accurately locate mobile nodes in an indoor environment with obstacles. Fingerprinting-based methods which combine Wi-Fi with ZigBee or Bluetooth are proposed in [ 15 , 16 ]. In such kind of combination, probability of signal interference is very high because of all the three technologies operate in the same frequency, 2.4 GHz. Results in [ 15 ] show that the combination of the three technologies perform weaker than when the Wi-Fi is combined with ZigBee or Bluetooth because of interference. In addition, the effect of device diversity, which is commonly encountered in Wi-Fi, is not addressed in [ 15 ]. A positioning scheme which aims at optimizing indoor fingerprinting systems is proposed in [ 17 ]. According to this scheme, indoor fingerprinting systems can be optimized based on the systems operating parameters such as the number of access points (Aps), the geometry of APs, arrangement of RPs, and the number of RSS samples. In [ 18 – 20 ], Wi-Fi positioning is combined with pedestrian dead reckoning (PDR) systems. A combination of these complementary technologies overcomes the fluctuation of RSS-based Wi-Fi positioning due to the fluctuation of RSSs and the accumulation of error over time in PDR system. As WiFi signals vary significantly over time and are susceptible to human presence, multipath, and fading due to the high operating frequency, fingerprinting of FM signals is used in [ 14 , 21 ]. Since FM signals vary less, localization accuracy is improved when FM and WiFi signals are combined to generate fingerprints. However, there are challenges when employing FM signals. The most crucial challenge is that FM signal does not carry any timing information, which is a critical factor in range calculation. Moreover, the accuracy of navigation using FM signals could be degraded, similarly to most radionavigation systems, by the effects of multipath especially for indoor areas [ 21 ]. An enhanced positioning trilateration algorithm for human body implant localization is proposed in [ 22 ]. The algorithm has two stages. In the first stage, three most suitable reference nodes are selected from all reference nodes within the range using optimization algorithm. In the second stage, position of a node whose location is unknown is estimated by means of adaptive geometric algorithm. The positioning environment of this algorithm, implants in a human body, is quite different from indoor or outdoor systems. Trilateration positioning schemes are more suitable than fingerprinting for positioning implants in human body, but fingerprinting methods provide better accuracy for indoor positioning [ 3 ]. RSS variation due to device heterogeneity occurs when a user’s device and a system configured device are different [ 6 ]. Average RSS variation due to Wi-Fi devices heterogeneity may exceed 18 dBm [ 7 ]. Another experiment done in [ 8 ] supports this result. Different localization methods are proposed in the literatures to address this issue [ 6 – 11 ]. SSD uses the difference of signal strength as a location fingerprint [ 8 ]. It is a robust location fingerprint when heterogeneous devices are used. Although SSD address the issue of device heterogeneity very well, it has drawbacks. The first drawback of SSD is the effect of shadowing variation. If the shadowing variance is in RSS, the shadowing variance in SSD is . The second drawback of SSD is the number of fingerprint vectors. The number of SSD fingerprint vectors is one less than the RSS fingerprint vector for the same number of APs. This will have a significant of localization error when the mobile device don not detect some of the APs because of obstacles or other reasons. Hyperbolic location fingerprinting (HLF) is proposed to overcome the device-diversity issue without manual calibration [ 9 , 10 ]. Here, fingerprints are recorded as the RSS ratio between pairs of APs rather than as absolute RSS values. Rank based fingerprinting algorithm which uses rank of the APs based on RSS values is proposed in [ 11 ]. This algorithm is based on the assumption that the rank of a given AP will be less affected due to device change compared to measured RSS value. Performance comparison between the two calibration free techniques HLF and SSD is done in [ 23 ]. It is shown that the two techniques perform almost the same. Although the issue of device diversity is addressed in [ 6 – 11 ], the performance of these schemes suffers from RSS variation due to change of environmental conditions. An indoor human/robot localization and monitoring system based on PIR sensors and RF is proposed in [ 2 ]. This method fuses the location information obtained from PIR and RF propagation model. From RF propagation model, position of the target is estimated and it is assumed to be distributed in some probable region. The authors use Cramer-Rao bound (CRB) to determine the probable region. The intersection region of the probable region (from CRB) and the sensing area of a PIR sensor that detects the target is the region in which the target is expected to be. Finally, the center of gravity for the intersection region is taken as the position of the target. Even though we use the same technology combination (RF and PIR sensors) as in [ 2 ], the issue we want to address is RSS variation in fingerprinting-based methods. We prefer fingerprinting than RF propagation model because fingerprinting-based methods provide better accuracy in indoor environments [ 3 ]. 3. Problem Definition Fingerprinting-based methods are widely used in indoor localization. These methods require two phases: online phase and offline phase. During the offline phase, RSS values are collected from sample locations and stored in database. In the online phase, RSS vector at physical position of the target object is compared with the fingerprints in the database. Position of the target is estimated based on the entries in the database that best matches the online RSS measurement. Since fingerprinting-based methods require two stages, the accuracy of these methods is significantly affected by RSS variation; that is, RSS vectors collected during the online phase are different from those collected during the offline phase even though the positions of the transmitter and receiver remains the same. This RSS variation is caused by device diversity [ 9 , 10 ] and change of conditions in the environment (e.g., distribution of furniture, people presence and movement, and opening and closing of doors) [ 5 ]. RSS variation due device diversity occurs when the device used in online phase is different from the device used in offline phase, [ 6 ]. Heterogeneous devices measure signal strength differently. In [ 7 ], an experiment is done to compare RSS of notebook and smartphone from the same location and at the same Wi-Fi AP. As shown from the results, the average RSS value from notebook is −47.6 dBm whereas from the smartphone is −66.2 dBm. A similar experiment done in [ 8 ] also supports this result. These experiments indicate that device heterogeneity has a serious impact on the accuracy of fingerprinting based systems and it can make room-size accuracy [ 9 ]. In addition to devices diversity, environment conditions like distribution of furniture, people presence and movement, and opening and closing of doors will not be the same in the two phases of fingerprinting. Hence, change of environmental conditions in the localization environment cause a considerable RSS variation [ 12 , 13 ]. To overcome localization error induced due to RSS variation, we have proposed a hybrid indoor localization system based on PIR sensors and RF. Our system operation consists of two stages. First, the zone of the target person is identified by PIR sensors. Secondly, RF fingerprints within the identified zone will be processed to estimate the final position of the person. Zone based processing of fingerprints help us to exclude deviated fingerprints caused by device diversity or change of conditions in the environment. 4. Methodology In this section, we provide a detailed description of the two stages of our localization system. The entire localization process is shown in Figure 1 . Figure 1: Localization process of our hybrid system. 4.1. Zone Identification by PIR Sensors PIR sensors detect the electromagnetic radiations emitted by persons when they move through each sensor’s field of view. A PIR sensor produces an ON signal when a person enters its sensing region and the center of this sensor is taken as the position the person. The output of a PIR sensor is characterized by the magnitude of the observed voltage. To capture RSS variation, we use a Bayesian classifier with Gaussian probability density function to classify the output voltage to in to three classes: , as shown in Figure 2 . The probability of a class when voltage of magnitude at the th cycle observed is given by where is , or , is the posterior probability of that depends on the value of , is the conditional probability of given , is the a priori probability of class , and is the a priori probability of that acts as a normalizing constant [ 24 ]. To determine the class to which the observed voltage belongs, we choose the class that has the maximum posterior probability for a given . Figure 2: Three classes of PIR sensor voltage output. We arranged four PIR sensors as indicated in Figure 3 and thirteen zones of different areas are created. For example, the five zones formed by PIR sensors A and B are , , , , and . For simplicity, at maximum two boundary regions will overlap and create zones when multiple sensors are deployed. Figure 3: Zones formed by four PIR sensors A, B, C, and D. After the output pattern of a PIR sensor is determined using a Bayesian classifier, the zone of the target person is estimated by processing multiple sensors’ report on the output pattern classification. When four PIR sensors are placed as in Figure 3 , we will have four possible options to determine the zone of the person. The four options are as follows. (1) From the four PIR sensors, one sensor classify the observed voltage to be in (the person is in its inside area). Hence, the zone identified for the next localization stage is , , or depending on which PIR sensor classifies the output voltage to be in . (2) Only one sensor classify the output voltage to be in . Here, the zone identified will be , , , or . (3) Two sensors classify the output voltage to be in . In this case, the identified zone will be the intersection region of the two boundary areas. (4) If all PIR sensors classify the observed voltage to be in , the area outside all PIR sensors coverage is the proposed zone for the next localization stage. 4.2. RF Localization This is the second stage of our localization system in which we apply -NN [ 25 ] algorithm to the fingerprints which are in the zone identified by PIR sensors. Two fingerprinting databases were created during the offline phase: one with RSS and the other with SSD. We proposed two localization methods, which corresponds to the databases created. The first is Proposed_1 which uses the database created based on SSD and the second is Proposed_2 which uses the database created with RSS. The detailed description on the creation of the two databases is presented below. Log-normal shadowing model is used to measure RSS at a distance from the transmitter, [ 26 ]. The received signal strength (in dBm) at distance (in meter) from the transmitter ( ) is given by where is the signal strength at the close-in reference distance from the transmitter, is the path loss exponent, and represents a Gaussian random variable with zero mean and standard deviation of dB [ 26 ]. The received signal strength at the reference distance , , using free space propagation model [ 17 ] is given by where is the transmission power, is the transmitter antenna gain, is the receiver antenna gain, is the wavelength of the transmitted wave signal, is the close-in reference distance from the transmitter, and is the system loss factor. The database created with RSS has the form , where is the zone of the fingerprint, is the location of the fingerprint, is RSS from AP i for location , is the number of AP’s, is the number of zones, and is the number of locations selected to collect fingerprints in each zone. Table 1 indicates the structure of our database created with RSS. Table 1: Database structure. From ( 2 ), the two terms which will bring RSS variation at a fixed distance are and . The variation of is due to hardware specific parameters like antenna gain. Even devices from the same vendor have different hardware specific parameters. This indicates that RSS is device dependent. To address the issue of device diversity in fingerprinting-based methods, creating fingerprint database using signal strength difference (SSD) is promising than absolute received signal strength. We proposed the idea of signal strength difference for mobile location in [ 27 ] and this idea has been recently used for indoor localization in [ 8 ]. SSD uses the difference of signal strengths received at the AP’s as a location fingerprint, ( 6 ). To describe SSD, let the transmitters be wireless APs with the same , and the receiver is a device carried by the target person. Let and denote RSSs by a mobile device from two APs at distances and with antenna gains and , respectively. Using ( 2 ) and ( 3 ), and can be expressed as Subtracting ( 4 ) from ( 5 ), we get As shown in ( 6 ), SSD is free from the receiver’s hardware specific parameter . This makes SSD a robust location fingerprint in device heterogeneity. The database created with SSD has the form , where and the other notations are similar with the database created with RSS. But the shadowing variance in SSD is much greater than in RSS. Because if and are two independent and identically distributed Gaussian random variables with mean zero and variance , then is a zero mean Gaussian random variable with variance . In the online phase, we apply -NN algorithm to the fingerprints which are inside the zone identified at the first stage by PIR sensors. The -NN algorithm is used to choose closer locations to the tested point. The closeness metric is a distance measurement in signal space. We calculate mean of the closer locations and take it as the estimated position of the test point. 5. Performance Evaluation In this section, we discuss the performance of the proposed localization methods. We used C++ to conduct simulations. Our proposed methods, Proposed_1 and Proposed_2, are compared with SSD [ 8 ] and traditional fingerprinting methods [ 5 ]. 5.1. Simulation Environment We consider a square localization field of 15 m × 15 m area. Four AP’s (at each corner) and four PIR sensors (at the center of the circles) are placed in the field as shown in Figure 4 . The localization field is divided in to square grids of size 0.6 m × 0.6 m and RF fingerprint are collected at the center of each grid. A total of 625 fingerprints (training points) are collected. For RSS measurement, we adopt the log-normal shadowing model [ 26 ], ( 7 ). In this model, the received power (in dBm) at a distance (in meter) from the transmitter is given by where is the transmission power, is the transmitter antenna gain, is the receiver antenna gain, is the transmitted carriers wavelength, is the close-in reference distance, is the system loss factor, is the path loss exponent, and represents a Gaussian random variable with zero mean and standard deviation of dB. Figure 4: Simulation environment. We assume the transmitters to be the four AP’s and have the same hardware specification and transmission power . To check the effect of device diversity, both of our databases are created (offline phase) with dBi and during the online phase dBi. The detailed simulation parameters are shown in Table 2 . Table 2: Simulation parameters. For PIR sensors voltage output, we generate a random number with Gaussian distribution of mean , and for the inside, boundary and outside area of PIR sensors, respectively. We set because the output voltage of a PIR sensor when a person enters its sensing area is inversely proportional to the distance between its center and the detected person. A total of 200 test points are selected from the inside and boundary areas of the four PIR sensors. We tried our best to make the test points distributed uniformly in the boundary and inside areas of PIR sensors. We did not include test points from the outside area of PIR sensors because arrangement of multiple PIR sensors as in Figure 4 will leave a negligible uncovered area by the sensors. 5.2. Results and Discussion In order to evaluate the performance our schemes, we compared our proposed schemes (Proposed_1 and Proposed_2) with SSD [ 8 ] and fingerprinting (traditional fingerprinting) [ 2 ]. We created two fingerprinting databases: one with RSS and the other with signal strength difference. Proposed_1 and SSD schemes use the database created with SSD, while Proposed_2 and fingerprinting use the database crated with RSS. For both of our proposed schemes, one column is added in the database to indicate zone of the fingerprint. A detailed description for databases is given in Section 4.2 . We considered localization error to investigate the performance the schemes. Localization error, , is given by where represents the real position and represents the estimated position. Figure 5(a) shows the cumulative distribution function of location error when the devices used in online phase and offline phase are different and the standard deviation for shadowing . Here, both device diversity and shadowing will cause RSS variation. The 0.8-meter accuracy of Proposed_1 achieves 84% and Proposed_2 achieves 65%, while fingerprinting and SSD are 46% and 28%, respectively. Our proposed methods outperform SSD and fingerprinting because the outlier fingerprints, fingerprints from a different zone of the test point, are excluded in the position estimation process. But for fingerprinting scheme, outlier fingerprints caused by device diversity and shadowing increase the localization error. The shadowing variance for SSD scheme is twice of the fingerprinting scheme. Hence, even though the issue of devices diversity is addressed in SSD scheme, its performance highly depends on the value of shadowing standard deviation. This is why the 0.8-meter accuracy of fingerprinting scheme is better than SSD when the standard deviation of shadowing becomes 3 dB. Figure 5: Cumulative distribution of error for Proposed_1, Proposed_2, SSD, and fingerprinting; (a) different devices and ; (b) different devices and ; (c) different devices and shadowing free; (d) homogeneous devices and . When the shadowing standard deviation is decreased to 2 dB, the 0.8-meter accuracy of Proposed_1 achieves 97%, SSD achieves 94%, Proposed_2 achieves 72%, and fingerprinting achieves 66%, Figure 5(b) . The performance of all schemes increases as shadowing standard deviation decreases from 3 dB to 2 dB. A decrease of shadowing standard deviation with 1 dB increase the performance of SSD scheme by 66%, but the performance increase of the other schemes is much less than this value. This indicates that SSD scheme is highly affected by shadowing among the four schemes, whereas Proposed_1 selects -nearest fingerprints which are within the zone of the test point and excludes outlier fingerprints induced due to shadowing. The combined effect of shadowing and device diversity makes fingerprinting scheme perform worst among the four localization schemes. Even though the real environment is not absolutely free from shadowing, we took an assumption as there is no shadowing and compare the above four schemes, Figure 5(c) . Here, RSS variation comes from only device diversity. In this case, SSD outperforms all other schemes followed by Proposed_1. SSD outperforms Proposed_1 because the proposed method always select fingerprints which are within the zone of the test point and excludes fingerprints which are in a different zone even the fingerprints are closer to the test point. Such kind of excluding fingerprints increase localization error in Proposed_1 scheme when the test point is closer to the boundary of the zone. But in SSD, fingerprints which are closer to the test point are selected without considering zone of the fingerprints. However, as the real world is not free from shadowing, excluding such kind of fingerprints when the test point closer boundary of zone has less effect as compared to the effect of shadowing and device diversity. Even though Proposed_2 and fingerprinting schemes use the same fingerprint database, Proposed_2 outperforms fingerprinting because the effect of RSS variation due to device diversity in fingerprinting scheme is higher than in Proposed_2. Figure 5(d) indicates cumulative distribution of localization error when similar devices are used during offline phase (database creation) and online phase (testing phase). In this case, the cause of RSS variation is only shadowing. Since the shadowing variance of SSD ( dB) is much greater than that of fingerprinting shadowing variance (= 9 dB), SSD is highly affected by shadowing among the four schemes and it performs worst. Both of our proposed schemes outperform SSD and fingerprinting. To generalize, the real localization environment is not free from shadowing and devices are heterogeneous. SSD addresses the issue of device diversity in fingerprinting but the effect of shadowing in SSD is higher than the effect in traditional fingerprinting scheme. Our proposed schemes address the issue of RSS variation independent of the cause of RSS variation: device diversity, shadowing, or any other. 6. Conclusion We have proposed a hybrid indoor human localization system based on RF and PIR sensors to address the issue of device diversity and shadowing in fingerprinting-based methods. Our system has two stages. In the first stage, the zone of the target person is identified by PIR sensors. In the second stage, we apply -NN algorithm to the fingerprints within the identified to estimate the position of the person. The purpose of processing fingerprints based on zone is to exclude outlier fingerprints due to device diversity or shadowing. Simulation results show that our proposed schemes outperform SSD and fingerprinting schemes when there is device diversity and shadowing. When the shadowing standard deviation and different devices are used for offline and online phase, the 0.8-meter accuracy of Proposed_1 achieves 84% and Poposed_2 65%, while fingerprinting and SSD are 46% and 28%, respectively. Conflict of Interests The authors declare that there is no conflict of interests regarding the publication of this paper. References H. H. Kim, K. N. Ha, S. Lee, and K. C. Lee, “Resident location-recognition algorithm using a Bayesian classifier in the PIR sensor-based indoor location-aware system,” IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man and Cybernetics Part C: Applications and Reviews , vol. 39, no. 2, pp. 240–245, 2009. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus R. C. Luo and O. Chen, “Wireless and pyroelectric sensory fusion system for indoor human/robot localization and monitoring,” IEEE/ASME Transactions on Mechatronics , vol. 18, no. 3, pp. 845–853, 2013. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus Y. Gu, A. Lo, and I. Niemegeers, “A survey of indoor positioning systems for wireless personal networks,” IEEE Communications Surveys and Tutorials , vol. 11, no. 1, pp. 13–32, 2009. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus H. Liu, H. Darabi, P. Banerjee, and J. Liu, “Survey of wireless indoor positioning techniques and systems,” IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man and Cybernetics Part C: Applications and Reviews , vol. 37, no. 6, pp. 1067–1080, 2007. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus P. Bahl and V. Padmanabhan, “RADAR: an in-building RF-based user location and tracking system,” in Proceedings of the 19th Annual Joint Conference of the IEEE Computer and Communications Societies (IEEE/INFOCOM '00) , vol. 2, pp. 775–784, IEEE, Tel Aviv, Israel, 2000. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar J. G. Park, D. Curtis, S. Teller, and J. Ledlie, “Implications of device diversity for organic localization,” in Proceedings of the IEEE INFOCOM 2011 , pp. 3182–3190, April 2011. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus C.-H. Wang, T.-W. Kao, S.-H. Fang et al., “Robust Wi-Fi location fingerprinting against device diversity based on spatial mean normalization,” in Proceedings of the IEEE Asia-Pacific Signal and Information Processing Association Annual Summit and Conference (APSIPA '13) , pp. 1–4, November 2013. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus A. K. M. Mahtab Hossain, Y. Jin, W.-S. Soh, and H. N. Van, “SSD: a robust RF location fingerprint addressing mobile devices' heterogeneity,” IEEE Transactions on Mobile Computing , vol. 12, no. 1, pp. 65–77, 2013. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus M. B. Kjærgaard, “Indoor location fingerprinting with heterogeneous clients,” Pervasive and Mobile Computing , vol. 7, no. 1, pp. 31–43, 2011. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus M. B. Kjærgaard and C. V. Munk, “Hyperbolic location fingerprinting: a calibration-free solution for handling differences in signal strength,” in Proceedings of the 6th Annual IEEE International Conference on Pervasive Computing and Communications (PerCom '08) , pp. 110–116, March 2008. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus J. MacHaj and P. Brida, “Optimization of rank based fingerprinting localization algorithm,” in Proceedings of the International Conference on Indoor Positioning and Indoor Navigation (IPIN '12) , pp. 1–7, Sydney, Australia, November 2012. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus L. Xu, F. Yang, Y. Jiang, L. Zhang, C. Feng, and N. Bao, “Variation of received signal strength in wireless sensor network,” in Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Advanced Computer Control (ICACC '11) , pp. 151–154, Harbin, China, January 2011. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar K. Subaashini, G. Dhivya, and R. Pitchiah, “Zigbee RF signal strength for indoor location sensing—experiments and results,” in Proceedings of the 14th International Conference on Advanced Communication Technology, ICACT 2012 , pp. 12–17, February 2012. View at Scopus Y. Chen, D. Lymberopoulos, J. Liu, and B. Priyantha, “Indoor localization using FM signals,” IEEE Transactions on Mobile Computing , vol. 12, no. 8, pp. 1502–1517, 2013. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus M. L. Rodrigues, L. F. M. Vieira, and M. F. M. Campos, “Fingerprinting-based radio localization in indoor environments using multiple wireless technologies,” in Proceedings of the 22nd IEEE International Symposium on Personal, Indoor and Mobile Radio Communications (PIMRC '11) , pp. 1203–1207, September 2011. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus Y. Gao, J. Niu, R. Zhou, and G. Xing, “ZiFind: exploiting cross-technology interference signatures for energy-efficient indoor localization,” in Proceedings of the 32nd IEEE Conference on Computer Communications (INFOCOM '13) , pp. 2940–2948, April 2013. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus V. Moghtadaiee and A. G. Dempster, “Design protocol and performance analysis of indoor fingerprinting positioning systems,” Physical Communication , vol. 13, pp. 17–30, 2014. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus L.-H. Chen, E. H.-K. Wu, M.-H. Jin, and G.-H. Chen, “Intelligent fusion of Wi-Fi and inertial sensor-based positioning systems for indoor pedestrian navigation,” IEEE Sesnor Jornal , vol. 14, no. 11, pp. 4034–4042, 2014. View at Google Scholar Y. Kim, Y. Chon, and H. Cha, “Smartphone-based collaborative and autonomous radio fingerprinting,” IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man and Cybernetics Part C: Applications and Reviews , vol. 42, no. 1, pp. 112–122, 2012. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus F. Evennou and F. Marx, “Advanced integration of WiFi and inertial navigation systems for indoor mobile positioning,” EURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing , vol. 2006, Article ID 86706, 11 pages, 2006. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus V. Moghtadaiee and A. G. Dempster, “Indoor location fingerprinting using FM radio signals,” IEEE Transactions on Broadcasting , vol. 60, no. 2, pp. 336–346, 2014. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus P. Brida and J. MacHaj, “A novel enhanced positioning trilateration algorithm implemented for medical implant in-body localization,” International Journal of Antennas and Propagation , vol. 2013, Article ID 819695, 10 pages, 2013. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus S.-H. Fang, C.-H. Wang, S.-M. Chiou, and P. Lin, “Calibration-free approaches for robust Wi-Fi positioning against device diversity: a performance comparison,” in Proceedings of the IEEE 75th Vehicular Technology Conference (VTC Spring '12) , pp. 1–5, June 2012. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus R. O. Duda, P. E. Hart, and D. G. Stork, Pattern Classification , Wiley, 2001. View at MathSciNet K. Kaemarungsi, Design of indoor positioning systems based on location fingerprinting technique [Ph.D. dissertation] , University of Pittsburgh, 2005. T. S. Rappaport, Wireless Communications—Principles and Practice , Prentice Hall, 2002. D.-B. Lin, R.-T. Juang, and H.-P. Lin, “Robust mobile location estimation based on signal attenuation for cellular communication systems,” Electronics Letters , vol. 40, no. 25, pp. 1594–1596, 2004. View at Publisher · View at Google Scholar · View at Scopus (function (i, s, o, g, r, a, m) { i['GoogleAnalyticsObject'] = r; i[r] = i[r] || function () { (i[r].q = i[r].q || []).push(arguments) }, i[r].l = 1 * new Date(); a = s.createElement(o), m = s.getElementsByTagName(o)[0]; a.async = 1; a.src = g; m.parentNode.insertBefore(a, m) })(window, document, 'script', '//www.google-analytics.com/analytics.js', 'ga'); ga('create', 'UA-8578054-2', 'auto'); ga('send', 'pageview');

Journal

International Journal of Distributed Sensor NetworksHindawi Publishing Corporation

Published: Mar 23, 2015

There are no references for this article.