Abstract

The Global Positioning System demonstrates the significance of Location Based Services but it cannot be used indoors due to the lack of line of sight between satellites and receivers. Indoor Positioning Systems are needed to provide indoor Location Based Services. Wireless LAN fingerprints are one of the best choices for Indoor Positioning Systems because of their low cost, and high accuracy, however they have many drawbacks: creating radio maps is time consuming, the radio maps will become outdated with any environmental change, different mobile devices read the received signal strength (RSS) differently, and peoples’ presence in LOS between access points and mobile device affects the RSS. This research proposes a new Adaptive Indoor Positioning System model (called DIPS) based on: a dynamic radio map generator, RSS certainty technique and peoples’ presence effect integration for dynamic and multi-floor environments. Dynamic in our context refers to the effects of people and device heterogeneity. DIPS can achieve 98% and 92% positioning accuracy for floor and room positioning, and it achieves 1.2 m for point positioning error. RSS certainty enhanced the positioning accuracy for floor and room for different mobile devices by 11% and 9%. Then by considering the peoples’ presence effect, the error is reduced by 0.2 m. In comparison with other works, DIPS achieves better positioning without extra devices.

Highlights

  • The location of a specific mobile device (MD) or user in a specific environment can be determined using positioning systems [1]

  • We propose Received Signal Strength Certainty (RSC) because it can be a robust solution for the MD heterogeneity problem

  • In order to validate people presence effect (PPE) on Indoor Positioning System (IPS) positioning results, an experiment was conducted in 88 m2 of free space area and received signal strength (RSS) of Access Points (APs) was calibrated at ten different points with people presence in the line of sight (LOS)

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Summary

Introduction

The location of a specific mobile device (MD) or user in a specific environment can be determined using positioning systems [1]. The widespread usage of the GPS has shown the significance of Location Based Services (LBS) in people’s daily life [2]. The GPS service fails to accurately identify indoor locations due to the lack of line of sight (LOS) between GPS receivers and satellites. This limitation has pushed many researchers to explore other techniques and methods to enable LBS in such closed environments

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