Abstract

Indoor pedestrian tracking has been identified as a key technology for indoor location-based services such as emergency locating, advertising, and gaming. However, existing smartphone-based approaches to pedestrian tracking in indoor environments have various limitations including a high cost of infrastructure constructing, labor-intensive fingerprint collection, and a vulnerability to moving obstacles. Moreover, our empirical study reveals that the accuracy of indoor locations estimated by a smartphone Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU) decreases severely when the pedestrian is arbitrarily wandering with an unstable speed. To improve the indoor tracking performance by enhancing the location estimation accuracy, we exploit smartphone-based acoustic techniques and propose an infrastructure-free indoor pedestrian tracking approach, called iIPT. The novelty of iIPT lies in the pedestrian speed reliability metric, which characterizes the reliability of the pedestrian speed provided by the smartphone IMU, and in a speed enhancing method, where we adjust a relatively less reliable pedestrian speed to the more reliable speed of a passing by “enhancer” based on the acoustic Doppler effect. iIPT thus changes the encountered pedestrians from an“obstacle” into an “enhancer.” Extensive real-world experiments in indoor scenarios have been conducted to verify the feasibility of realizing the acoustic Doppler effect between smartphones and to identify the applicable acoustic frequency range and transmission distance while reducing battery consumption. The experiment results demonstrate that iIPT can largely improve the tracking accuracy and decrease the average error compared with a conventional IMU-based method.

Highlights

  • Considered as the last step of mobile service, indoor pedestrian tracking (IPT) has been widely utilized by researchers for the study of indoor location-based applications and services

  • Into an “enhancer.” Extensive real-world experiments in indoor scenarios have been conducted to verify the feasibility of realizing the acoustic Doppler effect between smartphones and to identify the applicable acoustic frequency range and transmission distance while reducing battery consumption

  • The experiment results demonstrate that iIPT can largely improve the tracking accuracy and decrease the average error compared with a conventional Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU)-based method

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Summary

Introduction

Considered as the last step of mobile service, indoor pedestrian tracking (IPT) has been widely utilized by researchers for the study of indoor location-based applications and services. Similar to other smartphone-based IPT methods, extra infrastructures and self-designed devices are required to guarantee the tracking accuracy by emitting and receiving ultrasonic signals, which is time-consuming and has a high cost. We propose iIPT, an infrastructure-free pedestrian tracking approach, by combining smartphone-based acoustic and IMU techniques. The experiment results demonstrate that iIPT can largely improve the tracking accuracy and decrease the average error compared with a conventional IMU-based method. We present an infrastructure-free indoor pedestrian tracking approach by combining both smartphone-based acoustic and IMU techniques. We implement comprehensive experiments to identify the applicable acoustic frequency range, transmission distance, and battery consumption and demonstrate that iIPT can largely improve the tracking accuracy and decrease the average error, compared with PDR.

Motivation and Challenges
Basic Idea
Shortcomings of PDR
Basics of Doppler Effect
Key Issues
Problem Statement
Sub-Ultrasonic Doppler Identification
Sub-Ultrasonic Frequency
Sub-Ultrasonic Transmission Distance
Pedestrian Moving Detection
Robot Car Moving Detection
Walking Speed Enhancement
Performance Evaluation
Indoor Environment Description
Tracking Accuracy
Battery Consumption
Findings
Discussion
Conclusions
Full Text
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