RADAR: An In-Building RF-Based User Location and Tracking system Paramvir Bahl and Venkata N. Padmanabhan Microsoft Research Presented by: Ritu Kothari.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
RADAR: An In-Building RF-based User Location and Tracking System.
Advertisements

Overcoming Limitations of Sampling for Agrregation Queries Surajit ChaudhuriMicrosoft Research Gautam DasMicrosoft Research Mayur DatarStanford University.
Data Communication lecture10
Wearable Badge for Indoor Location Estimation of Mobile Users MAS 961 Developing Applications for Sensor Networks Daniel Olguin Olguin MIT Media Lab.
1 Electrical and Computer Engineering Drebin Rescuing Firefighters in Distress FPR Team Ganz: Jonathan Bruso Michael Carney Daniel Fortin James Schafer.
5/15/2015 Mobile Ad hoc Networks COE 499 Localization Tarek Sheltami KFUPM CCSE COE 1.
Monte Carlo Localization for Mobile Robots Karan M. Gupta 03/10/2004
Using Probabilistic Methods for Localization in Wireless Networks Presented by Adam Kariv May, 2005.
ACCURACY CHARACTERIZATION FOR METROPOLITAN-SCALE WI-FI LOCALIZATION Presented by Jack Li March 5, 2009.
Institute for Software Integrated Systems Vanderbilt University Node Density Independent Localization Presented by: Brano Kusy B.Kusy, M.Maroti, G.Balogh,
Shashika Biyanwila Research Engineer
Pedestrian Localization for Indoor Environments OliverWoodman, Robert Harle Helen 2009/8/24.
RADAR: An In-Building RF-based User Location and Tracking System Paramvir Bahl and Venkata N. Padmanabhan Microsoft Research.
Horus: A WLAN-Based Indoor Location Determination System Moustafa Youssef 2003 HORUSHORUS HORUSHORUS.
Locating Internet Hosts Venkata N. Padmanabhan Microsoft Research Harvard CS Colloquium 20 June 2001.
CMPE 257 Spring CMPE 257: Wireless and Mobile Networking Spring 2005 Location management.
Location Systems for Ubiquitous Computing Jeffrey Hightower and Gaetano Borriello.
UNIVERSITY of CRETE Fall04 – HY436: Mobile Computing and Wireless Networks Location Sensing Overview Lecture 8 Maria Papadopouli
EEE440 Modern Communication Systems Wireless and Mobile Communications.
Propagation characteristics of wireless channels
1 Lecture 9: Diversity Chapter 7 – Equalization, Diversity, and Coding.
BluEyes Bluetooth Localization and Tracking Ei Darli Aung Jonathan Yang Dae-Ki Cho Mario Gerla Ei Darli Aung Jonathan Yang Dae-Ki Cho Mario Gerla.
Presented by: Xi Du, Qiang Fu. Related Work Methodology - The RADAR System - The RADAR test bed Algorithm and Experimental Analysis - Empirical Method.
Rutgers: Gayathri Chandrasekaran, Tam Vu, Marco Gruteser, Rich Martin,
Sensing Location. References r P. Bahl, V. Padmanabhan, "RADAR: An In-Building RF-based User Location and Tracking System" IEEE INFOCOM 2000, vol. 2,
Indoor Localization using Wireless LAN infrastructure Location Based Services Supervised by Prof. Dr. Amal Elnahas Presented by Ahmed Ali Sabbour.
A Location-determination Application in WirelessHART Xiuming Zhu 1, Wei Dong 1,Aloysius K. Mok 1,Song Han 1, Jianping Song 1, Deji Chen 2,Mark Nixon 2.
RESEARCH CENTRE FOR INTEGRATED MICROSYSTEMS - UNIVERSITY OF WINDSOR By: Ning Chang Advisor: Dr. M. Ahmadi Co-advisor: Dr. R. Rashidzadeh Departmental Reader:
Patient Location via Received Signal Strength (RSS) Analysis Dan Albano, Chris Comeau, Jeramie Ianelli, Sean Palastro Project Advisor Taib Znati Tuesday.
SCPL: Indoor Device-Free Multi-Subject Counting and Localization Using Radio Signal Strength Chenren Xu†, Bernhard Firner†, Robert S. Moore ∗, Yanyong.
Projekt User location estimation by means of WLAN Carl-Friedrich-Gauss-Str Kamp-Lintfort Germany Dennis Vredeveld IMST GmbH IMST ipos.
Precise Indoor Localization using PHY Layer Information Aditya Dhakal.
Networked Systems Practicum Lecture 8 – Localization 1.
Tracking with Unreliable Node Sequences Ziguo Zhong, Ting Zhu, Dan Wang and Tian He Computer Science and Engineering, University of Minnesota Infocom 2009.
RADAR: An In-Building RF-based User Location and Tracking System Presented by: Michelle Torski Paramvir Bahl and Venkata N. Padmanabhan.
Dynamic Fine-Grained Localization in Ad-Hoc Networks of Sensors Weikuan Yu Dept. of Computer and Info. Sci. The Ohio State University.
Algorithms for Wireless Sensor Networks Marcela Boboila, George Iordache Computer Science Department Stony Brook University.
RADAR: An In-Building RF-based User Location and Tracking System.
1 Robust Statistical Methods for Securing Wireless Localization in Sensor Networks (IPSN ’05) Zang Li, Wade Trappe Yanyong Zhang, Badri Nath Rutgers University.
Accuracy Characterization for Metropolitan-scale Wi-Fi Localization Yu-Chung Cheng (UCSD, Intel Research) Yatin Chawathe (Intel Research) Anthony LaMarca.
Final Year Project Lego Robot Guided by Wi-Fi (QYA2) Presented by: Li Chun Kit (Ash) So Hung Wai (Rex) 1.
A Passive Approach to Sensor Network Localization Rahul Biswas and Sebastian Thrun International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems 2004 Presented.
RADAR: an In-building RF-based user location and tracking system
The Past, The Present and The Future & Peek into EzTrack Ashok K Madhavi Selvaraj 12/01/2010.
Human Tracking System Using DFP in Wireless Environment 3 rd - Review Batch-09 Project Guide Project Members Mrs.G.Sharmila V.Karunya ( ) AP/CSE.
Advancing Wireless Link Signatures for Location Distinction Mobicom 2008 Junxing Zhang, Mohammad H. Firooz Neal Patwari, Sneha K. Kasera University of.
Nissanka B. PriyanthaAnit Chakraborty Hari Balakrishnan MIT Lab for Computer Science The Cricket Location-Support System.
Accurate Indoor Localization With Zero Start-up Cost
1 Travel Times from Mobile Sensors Ram Rajagopal, Raffi Sevlian and Pravin Varaiya University of California, Berkeley Singapore Road Traffic Control TexPoint.
The Cricket Compass for Context-Aware Mobile Applications
The Cricket Location-Support System N. Priyantha, A. Chakraborty, and H. Balakrishnan MIT Lab for Computer Science MOBICOM 2000 Presenter: Kideok Cho
Mobile Robot Localization and Mapping Using Range Sensor Data Dr. Joel Burdick, Dr. Stergios Roumeliotis, Samuel Pfister, Kristo Kriechbaum.
Hybrid Indoor Positioning with Wi-Fi and Bluetooth: Architecture and Performance IEEE Mobile Data Management 2013 Artur Baniukevic†, Christian S. Jensen‡,
ArrayTrack : A Fine-Grained Indoor Location System Jie Xiong, Kyle Jamieson USENIX NSDI ‘ Jungmin Yoo *some slides.
CSCI 631 – Foundations of Computer Vision March 15, 2016 Ashwini Imran Image Stitching.
TECHNOLOGIES FOR WIRELESS GEOLOCATION
LEMON: An RSS-Based Indoor Localization Technique Israat T. Haque, Ioanis Nikolaidis, and Pawel Gburzynski Computing Science, University of Alberta, Canada.
RF-based positioning.
Radio Coverage Prediction in Picocell Indoor Networks
Teng Wei and Xinyu Zhang
PRESENTED BY Yang Jiao Timo Ahonen, Matti Pietikainen
Concept of Power Control in Cellular Communication Channels
Probabilistic Data Management
Georg Oberholzer, Philipp Sommer, Roger Wattenhofer
Georg Oberholzer, Philipp Sommer, Roger Wattenhofer
Smartphone Positioning Systems material from UIUC, Prof
RADAR: An In-Building RF-based User Location and Tracking System
Shashika Biyanwila Research Engineer
Team North Star + Lockheed Martin
RADAR: An In-Building RF-based User Location and Tracking System
Presentation transcript:

RADAR: An In-Building RF-Based User Location and Tracking system Paramvir Bahl and Venkata N. Padmanabhan Microsoft Research Presented by: Ritu Kothari

Overview Introduction Related Work Methodology - The RADAR System - The RADAR Testbed Algorithm and Experimental Analysis - Empirical Method - Radio Propagation Model Enhancements to the Basic system - Continuous User Tracking - Profiling the Environment - Effects of Multiple Floors Conclusion

Introduction User Location and Tracking (ULT) - User location problem - User Tracking problem Issues in general - Scalability - Response Time - Granularity - Relocation - Accuracy Approach used in RADAR

Related Work Location Tracking Systems Type: IR-Based Systems Active Badge Indoor RF Based Duress Alarm Location System 3D-iD RF tag System Global Positioning System (GPS) Others Pulsed Magnetic Fields Based Ultra Sound Signals

The RADAR System Implemented purely in software Functional Components - Base Stations (Access Points) - Mobile Users Fundamental Idea in RADAR - Signal Strength is a function of the receiver’s location - Road Maps Techniques to build the Road Maps - Empirical Method - Radio Propagation Model Search Techniques - Nearest Neighbor in Signal Space (NNSS) - NNSS Avg. - Viterbi-like Algorithm

The RADAR Testbed Base Station - Pentium-based PC - FreeBSD 3.0 Mobile Host - Pentium Based laptop - Windows 95 Enhanced RADAR - Multiple Floors

Data Collection Key Step in their approach Records the Radio Signal as a function of the user location Off-Line Phase Real-Time Phase Every packet received by the base station, the WiLIB extracts - Signal Strength - Noise floor at the transmitter - Noise floor at the receiver - MAC address of the transmitter

Data Processing Traces collected from the off-line phase are unified into a table consisting of tuples of the format [ x,y,d,ss(i),snr(i) ] I € {1,2,3} Search Algorithm - NNSS - NNSS – Avg. -Viterbi-like Algorithm Layout Information

Algorithm and Experimental Analysis

Empirical Method 280 combinations of user location and orientation (70 distinct points, 4 orientations on each point) Uses the above empirical data recorded in the off-line phase to construct the search space for the NNSS Algorithm Algorithm (Emulates the user location problem) 1. Picks one location and orientation randomly 2. Searches for a corresponding match in the rest of the 69 points and orientations Comparison with - Strongest Base Station - Random Selection

Error Distance Values

Empirical Method (Cntd.) Multiple Nearest Neighbor - Increases the accuracy of the Location Estimation Figure : Multiple Nearest Neighbors T – True Location G – Guess N1,N2,N3 - Neighbors N1 N3 N2 G T

Empirical Method (Cntd. ) Impact of Number of Data Points

Empirical Method (Cntd. ) Impact of Number of Number of Samples - Accuracy obtained by all the samples can be obtained if only a few samples are taken No. Of Real-Time SamplesError Distance degradation 130% 211% 34% Impact of User Orientation - Off-line readings for all orientations is not feasible - Work around is to calculate the error distance for all combinations

Empirical Method (Cntd. ) Tracking a Mobile User - Analogous to the user location problem - New Signal Strength data set - Window size of 10 samples - 4 Signal Strength Samples every second Limitation of Empirical Method - To start off with needs an initial signal strength data set - Relocation requires re-initialization of the initial data set.

Radio Propagation Model Introduction - Alternative method for extracting signal strength information - Based on a mathematical model of indoor signal propagation Issues - Reflection, scattering and diffraction of radio waves - Needs some model to compensate for attenuation due to obstructions Models - Rayleigh Fading Model : Infeasible - Rician Distribution Model : Complex - Wall Attenuation Factor

Wall Attenuation Factor

Radio Propagation Model (Cntd. ) Advantages: - Cost Effective - Easily Relocated

Future Work User Mobility Profile - Information about the likelihood of user’s current location based on old information - Aliasing effect gets reduced to a large extent Based Station based environmental profiling - Adds robustness to the system - Reduces inaccuracy Effects of Multiple Floors - Works Well - One map for each floor - Aliasing problem will increase

Continuous User Tracking Viterbi-like Algorithm 1. NNSS search is done for k nearest neighbors in the signal space 2. History of depth h of k-NNSS is maintained 3. Weights are assigned to the edges, larger the edge weight lesser is the likelihood of the transition Advantage - Outperforms NNSS, NNSS-Avg. - Reduces aliasing effect

Profiling the Environment Uses multiple Radio Maps based on different environments.

Conclusion RF-based user location and tracking algorithm is based on - Empirically measured signal strength model -- Accurate - Radio Propagation Model -- Easily relocated. RADAR could locate users with high degree of accuracy. Median resolution is 2-3 meters, which is fairly good Used to build “Location Services” - printing to the nearest printer - navigating through a building

Missing Pieces!! No mention of the response time of the System Not clear how well RADAR would work in a real-world setting Unsuitable for rapid development due to the initial infrastructure required Security & Privacy Issues associated with localization.

Thanks!!