Abstract

Indoor localization gains increasingly attentions in the era of Internet of Things. Among various technologies, WiFi-based systems that leverage Received Signal Strengths (RSSs) as location fingerprints become the mainstream solutions. However, RSS fingerprints suffer from critical drawbacks of spatial ambiguity and temporal instability that root in multipath effects and environmental dynamics, which degrade the performance of these systems and therefore impede their wide deployment in real world. Pioneering works overcome these limitations at the costs of ubiquity as they mostly resort to additional information or extra user constraints. In this paper, we present the design and implementation of MatLoc, an indoor localization system purely based on WiFi fingerprints, which jointly mitigates spatial ambiguity and temporal instability and derives reliable performance without impairing the ubiquity. The key idea is to embrace the spatial awareness of RSS values in a novel form of RSS Spatial Gradient (RSG) matrix for enhanced WiFi fingerprints. We devise techniques for the representation, construction, and comparison of the proposed fingerprint form, and integrate them all in a practical system, which follows the classical fingerprinting framework and requires no more inputs than any previous RSS fingerprint based systems. Extensive experiments in different environments demonstrate that MatLoc significantly improves the accuracy in both localization and tracking scenarios by about 30% to 50% compared with five state-of-the-art approaches.

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