Topology Partitioning-based Self-Organized Localization in Indoor WSNs with Unknown Obstacles
By: Ze Zhang, Qian Dong
Potential Business Impact:
Finds lost things inside buildings accurately.
Accurate indoor node localization is critical for practical Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) applications, as Global Positioning System (GPS) fails to provide reliable Line-of-Sight (LoS) conditions in most indoor environments. Real-world localization scenarios often involve unknown obstacles with unpredictable shapes, sizes, quantities, and layouts. These obstacles introduce significant deviations in measured distances between sensor nodes when communication links traverse them, severely compromising localization accuracy. To address this challenge, this paper proposes a robust range-based localization method that strategically identifies and severs obstructed communication paths, leveraging network topology to mitigate obstacle-induced errors. Across diverse obstacle configurations and node densities, the algorithm successfully severed 87% of obstacle-affected paths on average. Under the assumption that Received Signal Strength Indicator (RSSI) provides accurate distance measurements under LoS conditions, the achieved localization accuracy exceeds 99.99%.
Similar Papers
Robust Node Localization for Rough and Extreme Deployment Environments
Signal Processing
Finds lost things even in bad weather.
WiFi-based Global Localization in Large-Scale Environments Leveraging Structural Priors from osmAG
Robotics
Helps robots find their way indoors using Wi-Fi.
RAIL: An Accurate and Fast Angle-inferred Localization Algorithm for UAV-WSN Systems
Networking and Internet Architecture
Finds lost drones using only their signals.