Short-Term Tracking of Orientation with Inertial Sensors

In the past several years, IMU's have been widely used to measure the orientation of a moving body over a continuous period of time. Although, inertial navigation is a common approach for estimating the orientation, it greatly suffers from the accumulation of error in the orientation estimation...

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Main Author: Sedaghat, Golriz
Format: Others
Published: PDXScholar 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/4467
https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5538&context=open_access_etds
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spelling ndltd-pdx.edu-oai-pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu-open_access_etds-55382019-10-20T05:02:30Z Short-Term Tracking of Orientation with Inertial Sensors Sedaghat, Golriz In the past several years, IMU's have been widely used to measure the orientation of a moving body over a continuous period of time. Although, inertial navigation is a common approach for estimating the orientation, it greatly suffers from the accumulation of error in the orientation estimation. Most of the current common practices apply zero velocity update as a calibration method to address this problem and improve the estimation accuracy. However, this approach requires the sensors to be stationary frequently. This thesis introduces a novel method of calibration for estimating the elevation and bank angles of the orientation over a persistent human movement utilizing accelerometers and gyroscopes. The proposed technique incorporates the prior knowledge about the human motion to the estimation of the orientation to prevent the estimated position from growing unboundedly. The measurement model is designed to estimate the position for T seconds in the future. The knowledge of the estimated position for few seconds further in the future provides a feedback for orientation estimation during the periods of time when the accelerometer's readings are significantly deviated from gravity. This work evaluates the performance of the proposed method in two different ways: 1. a model of human movement is designed to generate synthetic data which resembles human motion. 2. an experimental design is implemented using a robot arm and an actual IMU to capture real data. The performance of the new technique is compared with the results from the inertial navigation approach. It is demonstrated that the new method significantly improves the accuracy of the orientation estimation. 2018-07-11T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/4467 https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5538&context=open_access_etds Dissertations and Theses PDXScholar Human mechanics -- Computer simulation Orientation (Physiology) Biomedical Electrical and Computer Engineering
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Human mechanics -- Computer simulation
Orientation (Physiology)
Biomedical
Electrical and Computer Engineering
spellingShingle Human mechanics -- Computer simulation
Orientation (Physiology)
Biomedical
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Sedaghat, Golriz
Short-Term Tracking of Orientation with Inertial Sensors
description In the past several years, IMU's have been widely used to measure the orientation of a moving body over a continuous period of time. Although, inertial navigation is a common approach for estimating the orientation, it greatly suffers from the accumulation of error in the orientation estimation. Most of the current common practices apply zero velocity update as a calibration method to address this problem and improve the estimation accuracy. However, this approach requires the sensors to be stationary frequently. This thesis introduces a novel method of calibration for estimating the elevation and bank angles of the orientation over a persistent human movement utilizing accelerometers and gyroscopes. The proposed technique incorporates the prior knowledge about the human motion to the estimation of the orientation to prevent the estimated position from growing unboundedly. The measurement model is designed to estimate the position for T seconds in the future. The knowledge of the estimated position for few seconds further in the future provides a feedback for orientation estimation during the periods of time when the accelerometer's readings are significantly deviated from gravity. This work evaluates the performance of the proposed method in two different ways: 1. a model of human movement is designed to generate synthetic data which resembles human motion. 2. an experimental design is implemented using a robot arm and an actual IMU to capture real data. The performance of the new technique is compared with the results from the inertial navigation approach. It is demonstrated that the new method significantly improves the accuracy of the orientation estimation.
author Sedaghat, Golriz
author_facet Sedaghat, Golriz
author_sort Sedaghat, Golriz
title Short-Term Tracking of Orientation with Inertial Sensors
title_short Short-Term Tracking of Orientation with Inertial Sensors
title_full Short-Term Tracking of Orientation with Inertial Sensors
title_fullStr Short-Term Tracking of Orientation with Inertial Sensors
title_full_unstemmed Short-Term Tracking of Orientation with Inertial Sensors
title_sort short-term tracking of orientation with inertial sensors
publisher PDXScholar
publishDate 2018
url https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/4467
https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5538&context=open_access_etds
work_keys_str_mv AT sedaghatgolriz shorttermtrackingoforientationwithinertialsensors
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