DocumentCode
23323
Title
A Historical-Beacon-Aided Localization Algorithm for Mobile Sensor Networks
Author
Jen-Feng Huang ; Guey-Yun Chang ; Gen-Huey Chen
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci. & Inf. Eng., Nat. Taiwan Univ., Taipei, Taiwan
Volume
14
Issue
6
fYear
2015
fDate
June 1 2015
Firstpage
1109
Lastpage
1122
Abstract
Range-free localization approaches are cost-effective for mobile sensor networks (because no additional hardware support is required). However, existing range-free localization approaches for mobile sensor networks suffer from either sparse anchor node problem or high communication cost. Due to economic considerations, mobile sensor networks typically have sparse anchor nodes which makes most range-free localization algorithms inaccurate. On the other hand, due to the power limitation of mobile sensor nodes (i.e., they are battery-operated) and high power consumption by communication, high communication cost will significantly reduce the network life time. For solving these two problems, in this paper, we use historical beacons (i.e., anchor nodes´ announcements delivered in previous time slots) and received signal strength (RSS) to derive three constraints. By the aid of the three constraints, we introduce a low-communication-cost range-free localization algorithm (only one-hop beacon broadcasting is required). According to the theoretical analysis and simulation results, our three constraints can indeed improve the accuracy. Simulation results also show that our algorithm outperforms even in irregular-radio-signal environments. In addition, a hardware implementation running on sensor nodes, Octopus Xs, confirms theoretical analysis and simulation results.
Keywords
RSSI; mobile communication; power consumption; sensor placement; telecommunication power management; wireless sensor networks; Octopus Xs; RSS; anchor nodes; communication cost; historical-beacon-aided localization algorithm; irregular-radio-signal environments; mobile sensor networks; network life time; one-hop beacon broadcasting; power consumption; range-free localization algorithms; range-free localization approaches; received signal strength; sensor nodes; sparse anchor node problem; Accuracy; Algorithm design and analysis; Approximation algorithms; Mobile communication; Mobile computing; Prediction algorithms; Wireless sensor networks; Ad-hoc network; localization; mobility; range-free; wireless sensor network;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Mobile Computing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1536-1233
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TMC.2014.2346777
Filename
6876148
Link To Document