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Not all those who drift are lost: Drift correction and calibration scheduling for the IoT

Published: June 10, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2506.09186v1

By: Aaron Hurst , Andrey V. Kalinichev , Klaus Koren and more

Potential Business Impact:

Fixes old sensors to give better readings.

Business Areas:
Smart Cities Real Estate

Sensors provide a vital source of data that link digital systems with the physical world. However, as sensors age, the relationship between what they measure and what they output changes. This is known as sensor drift and poses a significant challenge that, combined with limited opportunity for re-calibration, can severely limit data quality over time. Previous approaches to drift correction typically require large volumes of ground truth data and do not consider measurement or prediction uncertainty. In this paper, we propose a probabilistic sensor drift correction method that takes a fundamental approach to modelling the sensor response using Gaussian Process Regression. Tested using dissolved oxygen sensors, our method delivers mean squared error (MSE) reductions of up to 90% and more than 20% on average. We also propose a novel uncertainty-driven calibration schedule optimisation approach that builds on top of drift correction and further reduces MSE by up to 15.7%.

Country of Origin
🇩🇰 Denmark

Page Count
15 pages

Category
Electrical Engineering and Systems Science:
Signal Processing