Abstract

Indoor localization is of pivotal significance for a wide variety of services in the context of the Internet of Things (IoT). Both ranging-based and fingerprint-based localization techniques are promising for employment in harsh indoor environments. Hence, we propose a unified framework based on factor graphs for ubiquitous high-accuracy indoor localization. Our unified framework efficiently integrates ranging and fingerprinting for striking an appealing accuracy versus deployment cost tradeoff, where the crowdsourcing required for the construction of fingerprinting databases can also be addressed with little human intervention. By intrinsically amalgamating the global grid sampling and the regularized importance-resampling techniques, a nonparametric belief propagation algorithm is proposed for achieving the accurate position estimation at the cost of a moderate computational complexity. For improving the robustness to environmental variations, a likelihood-ratio-based approach is employed to detect ranging outliers. Moreover, a low-complexity serial scheduling scheme defined over factor graphs is designed for real-time localization. We design a hybrid ultrawide bandwidth and Wi-Fi localization system relying on off-the-shelf commercial devices and evaluate the proposed unified framework in a typical office building. Our experimental results show that the proposed algorithm outperforms the existing state-of-the-art methods and it is capable of achieving submeter localization accuracy.

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