Title :
General software for multimodal signal modeling and optimal sensor placement: Environmental Awareness for Sensor and Emitter Employment (EASEE)
Author :
Yamamoto, Kenneth K. ; Vecherin, Sergey N. ; Wilson, D. Keith ; Borden, Christian T. ; Bettencourt, Elizabeth ; Pettit, Chris L.
Author_Institution :
Signature Phys., U.S. Army ERDC-CRREL, Hanover, NH, USA
Abstract :
The Environmental Awareness for Sensor and Emitter Employment (EASEE) software is designed to help in surveillance planning by predicting detection performance of sensors and optimizing sensor selection and placement for intrusion detection around any controlled area, including power plants, dams, borders, prisons, military bases, combat outposts, etc. By its flexible, object-oriented software architecture, EASEE can simulate the performance of a wide variety of sensor modalities-including optical, acoustic, seismic, magnetic, radio-frequency, chemical, and biological-in the realistic terrain and weather conditions of the surveillance environment. EASEE characterizes complex terrain and weather effects on target signatures, signal propagation, and sensor systems, using an expansive library of realistic physics models. Statistical methodologies are also used to account for uncertainties from random signal-generation and propagation mechanisms. A built-in sensor placement algorithm optimizes sensor selections and placements based on sensor supply limitations, coverage priorities, overlapping sensor coverage preferences, and wireless sensor communication requirements.
Keywords :
computerised instrumentation; sensor placement; statistical analysis; surveillance; EASEE software; borders; built-in sensor placement algorithm; combat outposts; complex terrain effects; dams; environmental awareness for sensor and emitter employment software; expansive library; military bases; multimodal signal modeling; object-oriented software architecture; optimal sensor placement; power plants; prisons; propagation mechanisms; random signal-generation mechanism; realistic physics models; sensor coverage preferences; sensor modality; sensor selection optimization; sensor supply limitations; signal propagation; statistical method; surveillance environment; surveillance planning; target signatures; weather conditions; weather effects; wireless sensor communication requirements; Acoustics; Atmospheric modeling; Computational modeling; Object oriented modeling; Radio frequency; Solid modeling; XML; battlefield command and control (C2); decision-support tool; environmental effects; homeland security; intrusion detection; mission planning; object-oriented programming; sensors; signal modeling; surveillance;
Conference_Titel :
Security Technology (ICCST), 2012 IEEE International Carnahan Conference on
Conference_Location :
Boston, MA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-2450-2
Electronic_ISBN :
1071-6572
DOI :
10.1109/CCST.2012.6393539