DocumentCode
1758431
Title
An Empirical Evaluation of a Probabilistic RF Signature for WLAN Location Fingerprinting
Author
Alsindi, Nayef ; Chaloupka, Zdenek ; AlKhanbashi, Nuha ; Aweya, James
Author_Institution
Etisalat BT Innovation Center (EBTIC), Khalifa Univ. of Sci., Technol. & Res. (KUSTAR), Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates
Volume
13
Issue
6
fYear
2014
fDate
41791
Firstpage
3257
Lastpage
3268
Abstract
Localization for indoor environments has gained considerable attention over the last decade. The most popular technique is based on location fingerprinting using received signal strength (RSS) mainly due to the fact that it exploits the available wireless infrastructure and that RSS fingerprints are readily available using different wireless standards (IEEE 802.11, etc.). This simplicity however incurs a cost in accuracy and researchers focus on improving the performance from a pattern recognition perspective. Recently improvement in performance has been demonstrated using physical layer channel-based fingerprints such as the Channel Transfer Function (CTF) and Channel Impulse Response (CIR) at a cost of increased storage and computation requirements. In this paper we experimentally evaluate the performance of a probabilistic physical layer fingerprint that is based on entropy of the magnitude and phase of the CTF. We will show through extensive frequency domain channel measurements in an indoor office environment that entropy can be a practical alternative to RSS fingerprinting; where it shares the latter´s simplicity of structure (scalar) but outperforms RSS and complex CIR fingerprints. We further investigate the impact of realistic channel and system impairments such as small-scale fading (Doppler), Signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and interference on the performance of the proposed fingerprint signature.
Keywords
entropy; fading channels; frequency-domain analysis; indoor radio; probability; wireless LAN; CIR; CTF; Doppler; RSS fingerprints; SNR; channel impulse response; channel transfer function; entropy; fingerprint signature; frequency domain channel measurements; indoor office environment; interference; localization; location fingerprinting; pattern recognition perspective; physical layer channel-based fingerprints; probabilistic physical layer fingerprint; realistic channel; received signal strength; signal-to-noise ratio; small-scale fading; system impairments; wireless infrastructure; wireless standards; Accuracy; Correlation; Entropy; Measurement; Pattern recognition; Radio frequency; Vectors; Indoor localization; channel measurements; entropy estimation; location fingerprinting;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Wireless Communications, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1536-1276
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TWC.2014.041714.131113
Filename
6805329
Link To Document