DocumentCode
20865
Title
DuRT: Dual RSSI Trend Based Localization for Wireless Sensor Networks
Author
Sahu, P.K. ; Wu, Eric Hsiao-Kuang ; Sahoo, Jagruti
Author_Institution
Dept. d´Inf. et de Rech. Operationnelle, Univ. de Montreal, Montreal, QC, Canada
Volume
13
Issue
8
fYear
2013
fDate
Aug. 2013
Firstpage
3115
Lastpage
3123
Abstract
Localization is a key issue in wireless sensor networks. The geographical location of sensors is important information that is required in sensor network operations such as target detection, monitoring, and rescue. These methods are classified into two categories, namely range-based and range-free. Range-based localizations achieve high location accuracy by using specific hardware or using absolute received signal strength indicator (RSSI) values, whereas range-free approaches obtain location estimates with lower accuracy. Because of the hardware and energy constraints in sensor networks, RSSI offers a convenient method to find the position of sensor nodes. However, in the presence of channel noise, fading, and attenuation, it is not possible to estimate the actual location. In this paper, we propose an RSSI-based localization scheme that considers the trend of RSSI values obtained from beacons to estimate the position of sensor nodes. Through applying polynomial modeling on the relationship between received RSSI and distance, we are able to locate the maximum RSSI point on the anchor trajectory. Using two such trajectories, the sensor position can be determined by calculating the intersection point of perpendiculars passing through the maximum RSSI point on each trajectory. In addition, we devised schemes to improve the localization method to perform under a variety of cases such as single trajectory, unavailability of RSSI trends, and so. The advantage of our scheme is that it does not rely on absolute RSSI values and hence, can be applied in dynamic environments. In simulations, we demonstrate that the proposed localization scheme achieves higher location accuracy compared with existing localization approaches.
Keywords
direction-of-arrival estimation; fading channels; polynomials; sensor placement; wireless sensor networks; RSSI based localisation; anchor trajectory; attenuation; beacon; channel noise; dynamic environment; fading channel; geographical sensor location; intersection point calculation; polynomial modeling; range free localisation method; range-based localisation method; received signal strength indicator; sensor node position estimation; wireless sensor network; Localization; mobile anchor; wireless sensor networks;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Sensors Journal, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1530-437X
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JSEN.2013.2257731
Filename
6502185
Link To Document