DocumentCode
169035
Title
Visual light landmarks for mobile devices
Author
Rajagopal, Niranjini ; Lazik, Patrick ; Rowe, Andrew
Author_Institution
Electr. & Comput. Eng, Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA, USA
fYear
2014
fDate
15-17 April 2014
Firstpage
249
Lastpage
260
Abstract
The omnipresence of indoor lighting makes it an ideal vehicle for pervasive communication with mobile devices. In this paper, we present a communication scheme that enables interior ambient LED lighting systems to send data to mobile devices using either cameras or light sensors. By exploiting rolling shutter camera sensors that are common on tablets, laptops and smartphones, it is possible to detect high-frequency changes in light intensity reflected off of surfaces and in direct line-of-sight of the camera. We present a demodulation approach that allows smartphones to accurately detect frequencies as high as 8kHz with 0.2kHz channel separation. In order to avoid humanly perceivable flicker in the lighting, our system operates at frequencies above 2kHz and compensates for the non-ideal frequency response of standard LED drivers by adjusting the light´s duty-cycle. By modulating the PWM signal commonly used to drive LED lighting systems, we are able to encode data that can be used as localization landmarks. We show through experiments how a binary frequency shift keying modulation scheme can be used to transmit data at 1.25 bytes per second (fast enough to send an ID code) from up to 29 unique light sources simultaneously in a single collision domain. We also show how tags can demodulate the same signals using a light sensor instead of a camera for low-power applications.
Keywords
cameras; demodulation; frequency response; light emitting diodes; optical communication; pulse width modulation; smart phones; LED lighting systems; PWM signal; binary frequency shift keying modulation scheme; demodulation approach; frequency 0.2 kHz; frequency 8 kHz; indoor lighting; interior ambient LED lighting systems; localization landmarks; mobile devices; pervasive communication; rolling shutter camera sensors; sources; standard LED drivers; visual light landmarks; Cameras; Frequency shift keying; Light emitting diodes; Lighting; Pulse width modulation; Sensors; Visualization; Indoor localization; Visual light communication; Wireless communication;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Information Processing in Sensor Networks, IPSN-14 Proceedings of the 13th International Symposium on
Conference_Location
Berlin
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-3146-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IPSN.2014.6846757
Filename
6846757
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