An investigation of min-max method problems for RSSI-based indoor localization: Theoretical and experimental studies

A study of limitations of a min-max or a bounding-box method for received signal strength indicator (RSSI)-based indoor localization is introduced in this paper. The main goal of our study is to clearly understand how the widely used min-max method determines an unknown target positio...

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Main Authors: Apidet Booranawong, Kiattisak Sengchuai, Nattha Jindapetch, Hiroshi Saito
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Khon Kaen University 2020-09-01
Series:Engineering and Applied Science Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ph01.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/easr/article/download/234566/164899/
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spelling doaj-208fa5cc7cec494990546c27e1dc3f3a2020-11-25T03:59:07ZengKhon Kaen UniversityEngineering and Applied Science Research2539-61612539-62182020-09-0147331332510.14456/easr.2020.34An investigation of min-max method problems for RSSI-based indoor localization: Theoretical and experimental studiesApidet BooranawongKiattisak SengchuaiNattha JindapetchHiroshi SaitoA study of limitations of a min-max or a bounding-box method for received signal strength indicator (RSSI)-based indoor localization is introduced in this paper. The main goal of our study is to clearly understand how the widely used min-max method determines an unknown target position, and to investigate its significant limitations. For this purpose, we provide both theoretical and experimental studies. The theoretical study first gives an understanding of min-max theoretical limitations, while an experimental study then reveals more limitations. Experiments were done in an indoor environment, a laboratory room, where we employed an LPC2103F with a CC2500 RF module as a wireless node. Our results indicate that the min-max method can be efficiently used to estimate an unknown target’s position. However, such a method has limitations in several cases. First, it produces a significantly high estimation error when the unknown target is located outside an internal zone, the area within reference node positions. Second, fluctuations of measured RSSI signals in an obstacle environment is a major problem that produces significantly more estimation errors. Various effects in this case are detailed in the paper. Our information will be useful to develop more efficient min-max methods.https://ph01.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/easr/article/download/234566/164899/rssibounding-boxlocalizationtheoretical studyexperiment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Apidet Booranawong
Kiattisak Sengchuai
Nattha Jindapetch
Hiroshi Saito
spellingShingle Apidet Booranawong
Kiattisak Sengchuai
Nattha Jindapetch
Hiroshi Saito
An investigation of min-max method problems for RSSI-based indoor localization: Theoretical and experimental studies
Engineering and Applied Science Research
rssi
bounding-box
localization
theoretical study
experiment
author_facet Apidet Booranawong
Kiattisak Sengchuai
Nattha Jindapetch
Hiroshi Saito
author_sort Apidet Booranawong
title An investigation of min-max method problems for RSSI-based indoor localization: Theoretical and experimental studies
title_short An investigation of min-max method problems for RSSI-based indoor localization: Theoretical and experimental studies
title_full An investigation of min-max method problems for RSSI-based indoor localization: Theoretical and experimental studies
title_fullStr An investigation of min-max method problems for RSSI-based indoor localization: Theoretical and experimental studies
title_full_unstemmed An investigation of min-max method problems for RSSI-based indoor localization: Theoretical and experimental studies
title_sort investigation of min-max method problems for rssi-based indoor localization: theoretical and experimental studies
publisher Khon Kaen University
series Engineering and Applied Science Research
issn 2539-6161
2539-6218
publishDate 2020-09-01
description A study of limitations of a min-max or a bounding-box method for received signal strength indicator (RSSI)-based indoor localization is introduced in this paper. The main goal of our study is to clearly understand how the widely used min-max method determines an unknown target position, and to investigate its significant limitations. For this purpose, we provide both theoretical and experimental studies. The theoretical study first gives an understanding of min-max theoretical limitations, while an experimental study then reveals more limitations. Experiments were done in an indoor environment, a laboratory room, where we employed an LPC2103F with a CC2500 RF module as a wireless node. Our results indicate that the min-max method can be efficiently used to estimate an unknown target’s position. However, such a method has limitations in several cases. First, it produces a significantly high estimation error when the unknown target is located outside an internal zone, the area within reference node positions. Second, fluctuations of measured RSSI signals in an obstacle environment is a major problem that produces significantly more estimation errors. Various effects in this case are detailed in the paper. Our information will be useful to develop more efficient min-max methods.
topic rssi
bounding-box
localization
theoretical study
experiment
url https://ph01.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/easr/article/download/234566/164899/
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