Abstract

Localization of target tagged objects on the shelf is of great significance in RFID-enabled warehousing scenarios. Compared with the RFID localization systems that use fixed reader antennas or mobile RFID-robot, the portable reader-based methods are much more cost-effective. Hence, this paper focuses on reader-portable RFID localization. However, the existing reader-portable localization systems suffer from the following limitations: (i) reader antenna is required to pass by the target tags. Thus, the tags in the corner can never be located; (ii) many reference tags need to be deployed on the shelf in advance, which considerably increases the manpower; (iii) specialized antenna is required, which limits the promotion potential. To this end, this paper proposes a Waving action-driven RFID Localization (WRL) system, which enables tag localization with a portable camera-augmented reader. In the WRL system, a user only needs to wave the camera-augmented reader before locating the target tags. Specifically, we first use a classical camera pose estimation method named PnP to recover the antenna’s movement trajectory in a pixel coordinate system. Then, WRL constructs a gridded hologram, in which camera data and RFID phase data are jointly used to calculate a probability for each grid. Intuitively, the higher probability a grid has, the more possible the target tag lies in the corresponding grid. Based on this idea, WRL calculates the target tag’s location on the shelf. We use the Commercial-Off-The-Shelf (COTS) RFID and camera devices to implement the WRL system. Extensive experiments have been conducted, and the results demonstrate that the mean localization error of WRL is less than 20cm with a confidence of about 95%.

Full Text
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