Abstract

Most existing connectivity-based localization algorithms require high node density which is unavailable in many large-scale sparse mobile networks. By analyzing large datasets of real user traces from Dartmouth and MIT, we observe that user mobility exhibits high spatiotemporal regularity and, more importantly, that user mobility is strongly correlated with the user's social encounters (including so called Familiar Strangers). Motivated by these important observations, we propose a distributed localization scheme called SOMA that is particularly suitable for sparse mobile networks. To exploit the correlation between mobility and social encounters, we formulate the localization process as an optimization problem with the objective of maximizing the probability of visiting a sequence of locations when the user witnesses the given set of social encounters at different time. Employing the Hidden Markov Model, we design an efficient algorithm based on dynamic programming for solving the optimization problem. SOMA is fully distributed, in which each user only makes use of the connectivity information with other users. Since different users may have varying levels of mobility regularity, one critical challenge with SOMA is that a user with weak mobility regularity may result in poor localization accuracy. We introduce the concept of mobility irregularity to distinguish users. Then, one optimization is made to SOMA that allows a user with weak mobility regularity to leverage the locations from the users encounters. Experimental results based on large-scale real traces demonstrate that SOMA achieves much smaller localization error than many state-of-the-art localization schemes, but requires it minimal running time.

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