Optimal Planning of Distributed Sensor Layouts for Collaborative Surveillance

The use of a spatially distributed set of sensors has become a cost-effective approach to achieve surveillance coverage against moving targets. As more sensors are utilized in a collaborative manner, the optimal placement of sensors becomes critical to achieve the most efficient coverage. In this pa...

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Main Authors: Thomas A. Wettergren, Russell Costa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2013-04-01
Series:International Journal of Distributed Sensor Networks
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/145496
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spelling doaj-e1a185cd18274ef8ba6b541fa7c1bb6b2020-11-25T03:46:27ZengSAGE PublishingInternational Journal of Distributed Sensor Networks1550-14772013-04-01910.1155/2013/145496Optimal Planning of Distributed Sensor Layouts for Collaborative SurveillanceThomas A. WettergrenRussell CostaThe use of a spatially distributed set of sensors has become a cost-effective approach to achieve surveillance coverage against moving targets. As more sensors are utilized in a collaborative manner, the optimal placement of sensors becomes critical to achieve the most efficient coverage. In this paper, we develop a numerical optimization approach to place distributed sets of sensors to perform surveillance against moving targets over extended areas. In particular, we develop a genetic algorithm solution to find spatial sensor density functions that maximize effectiveness against moving targets, where the surveillance performance of individual sensors is dependent on their absolute position in the region as well as their relative position to both the expected target(s) and any asset that is being protected. The density function representation of optimal sensor locations is shown to provide a computationally efficient method for determining sensor asset location planning. We illustrate the effective performance of this method on numerical examples based on problems of general area surveillance and risk-based surveillance in protection of an asset.https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/145496
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thomas A. Wettergren
Russell Costa
spellingShingle Thomas A. Wettergren
Russell Costa
Optimal Planning of Distributed Sensor Layouts for Collaborative Surveillance
International Journal of Distributed Sensor Networks
author_facet Thomas A. Wettergren
Russell Costa
author_sort Thomas A. Wettergren
title Optimal Planning of Distributed Sensor Layouts for Collaborative Surveillance
title_short Optimal Planning of Distributed Sensor Layouts for Collaborative Surveillance
title_full Optimal Planning of Distributed Sensor Layouts for Collaborative Surveillance
title_fullStr Optimal Planning of Distributed Sensor Layouts for Collaborative Surveillance
title_full_unstemmed Optimal Planning of Distributed Sensor Layouts for Collaborative Surveillance
title_sort optimal planning of distributed sensor layouts for collaborative surveillance
publisher SAGE Publishing
series International Journal of Distributed Sensor Networks
issn 1550-1477
publishDate 2013-04-01
description The use of a spatially distributed set of sensors has become a cost-effective approach to achieve surveillance coverage against moving targets. As more sensors are utilized in a collaborative manner, the optimal placement of sensors becomes critical to achieve the most efficient coverage. In this paper, we develop a numerical optimization approach to place distributed sets of sensors to perform surveillance against moving targets over extended areas. In particular, we develop a genetic algorithm solution to find spatial sensor density functions that maximize effectiveness against moving targets, where the surveillance performance of individual sensors is dependent on their absolute position in the region as well as their relative position to both the expected target(s) and any asset that is being protected. The density function representation of optimal sensor locations is shown to provide a computationally efficient method for determining sensor asset location planning. We illustrate the effective performance of this method on numerical examples based on problems of general area surveillance and risk-based surveillance in protection of an asset.
url https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/145496
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