| Literature DB >> 31185660 |
Ngoc Mai Nguyen1, Le Chung Tran2, Farzad Safaei3, Son Lam Phung4, Peter Vial5, Nam Huynh6, Anne Cox7, Theresa Harada8, Johan Barthelemy9.
Abstract
Non-GPS localization has gained much interest from researchers and industries recently because GPS might fail to meet the accuracy requirements in shadowing environments. The two most common range-based non-GPS localization methods, namely Received Signal Strength Indicator (RSSI) and Angle-of-Arrival (AOA), have been intensively mentioned in the literature over the last decade. However, an in-depth analysis of the weighted combination methods of AOA and RSSI in shadowing environments is still missing in the state-of-the-art. This paper proposes several weighted combinations of the two RSSI and AOA components in the form of pAOA + qRSSI, devises the mathematical model for analyzing shadowing effects, and evaluates these weighted combination localization methods from both accuracy and precision perspectives. Our simulations show that increasing the number of anchors does not necessarily improve the precision and accuracy, that the AOA component is less susceptible to shadowing than the RSSI one, and that increasing the weight of the AOA component and reducing that of the RSSI component help improve the accuracy and precision at high Signal-to-Noise Ratios (SNRs). This observation suggests that some power control algorithm could be used to increase automatically the transmitted power when the channel experiences large shadowing to maintain a high SNR, thus guaranteeing both accuracy and precision of the weighted combination localization techniques.Entities:
Keywords: AOA; Non-GPS localization; RSSI; VANET; shadowing effects
Year: 2019 PMID: 31185660 PMCID: PMC6603711 DOI: 10.3390/s19112633
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Classification of Measuring Techniques.
| Method | Bearing Measurement | Advantages | Disadvantages | Literature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Time of Arrival (TOA) | Distance | Simple to calculate | Require strict synchronization | [ |
| Time of Arrival (TOA) | Distance | Simple to calculate | Require strict synchronization | [ |
| Time Difference of Arrival (TDOA) | Distance | Asynchronous process | Time delay can be large and require large bandwidth | [ |
| Frequency Difference of Arrival (FDOA) (i.e., Differential Doppler) | Distance | Robust for moving nodes | Hard to merely use FDOA to locate nodes because of its non-linear equation. FDOA is normally combined with TDOA | [ |
| Received Signal Strength Indicator (RSSI) | Distance | Simplest method and do not require complicated hardware | Need preliminary knowledge on the propagation environment and subjective to noise | [ |
| Angle of Arrival (AOA) | Angle | Robust to noise | More complex and expensive than other types | [ |
| Power Difference of Arrival (PDOA) | Distance | Do not need many anchors in the network | Affected by shadowing and noise effects | [ |
Figure 1Localization using 2AOA.
Figure 2Localization using 2RSSI.
Figure 3Localization using 3RSSI.
Summary of localization methods.
| Number of Anchors | Method | Measurements | Mathematical Formulas | Graphical Representation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1AOA + 1RSSI |
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| 2 | 2AOA |
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| 2 | 2RSSI |
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| 2 | 1AOA + 2RSSI |
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| 2 | 2AOA + 1RSSI |
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| 2 | 2AOA + 2RSSI |
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| 3 | 3RSSI |
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| 3 | Weighted 3RSSI |
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Figure 41AOA + 1RSSI method without shadowing effects ().
Figure 51AOA + 1RSSI method under shadowing effects ().
Figure 61AOA + 1RSSI method under shadowing effects ().
Figure 7Precision comparison using ideal covariance noise matrix without shadowing effects ().
Figure 8Precision comparison using ideal covariance noise matrix under shadowing effects ().
Figure 9Precision comparison using ideal covariance noise matrix under shadowing effects ().
Figure 10Precision comparison using instantaneous realizations of noise without shadowing ().
Figure 11Precision comparison using instantaneous realizations of noise with shadowing ().
Figure 12Confirmation of the lower bound of the AOA performance ().
Figure 13Accuracy comparison at SNR = 0 dB ().
Figure 14Accuracy comparison at SNR = 0 dB ().