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Journal ArticleDOI

CrowdLoc: Cellular Fingerprinting for Crowds by Crowds

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TLDR
An id-free broadcast mechanism, using audio as a medium, to share information among mobile phones is developed and it is shown that such communication can work effectively on smartphones, even in real-life, noisy-road conditions.
Abstract
Determining the location of a mobile user is central to several crowd-sensing applications. Using a Global Positioning System is not only power-hungry, but also unavailable in many locations. While there has been work on cellular-based localization, we consider an unexplored opportunity to improve location accuracy by combining cellular information across multiple mobile devices located near each other. For instance, this opportunity may arise in the context of public transport units having multiple travelers.Based on theoretical analysis and an extensive experimental study on several public transportation routes in two cities, we show that combining cellular information across nearby phones considerably improves location accuracy. Combining information across phones is especially useful when a phone has to use another phone’s fingerprint database, in a fingerprinting-based localization scheme. Both the median and 90 percentile errors reduce significantly. The location accuracy also improves irrespective of whether we combine information across phones connected to the same or different cellular operators.Sharing information across phones can raise privacy concerns. To address this, we have developed an id-free broadcast mechanism, using audio as a medium, to share information among mobile phones. We show that such communication can work effectively on smartphones, even in real-life, noisy-road conditions.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Enabling RFID-Based Tracking for Multi-Objects with Visual Aids: A Calibration-Free Solution

TL;DR: This work proposes Tagview, a pervasive identifying and tracking system that can work in various settings without repetitive calibration efforts and can archive high accuracy and robustness.
References
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Book

Wireless Communications: Principles and Practice

TL;DR: WireWireless Communications: Principles and Practice, Second Edition is the definitive modern text for wireless communications technology and system design as discussed by the authors, which covers the fundamental issues impacting all wireless networks and reviews virtually every important new wireless standard and technological development, offering especially comprehensive coverage of the 3G systems and wireless local area networks (WLANs).
Book

Probability, random variables, and stochastic processes

TL;DR: In this paper, the meaning of probability and random variables are discussed, as well as the axioms of probability, and the concept of a random variable and repeated trials are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Locating the nodes: cooperative localization in wireless sensor networks

TL;DR: Using the models, the authors have shown the calculation of a Cramer-Rao bound (CRB) on the location estimation precision possible for a given set of measurements in wireless sensor networks.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Nericell: rich monitoring of road and traffic conditions using mobile smartphones

TL;DR: Nericell is presented, a system that performs rich sensing by piggybacking on smartphones that users carry with them in normal course, and addresses several challenges including virtually reorienting the accelerometer on a phone that is at an arbitrary orientation, and performing honk detection and localization in an energy efficient manner.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cooperative Localization in Wireless Networks

TL;DR: This paper describes several cooperative localization algorithms and quantify their performance, based on realistic UWB ranging models developed through an extensive measurement campaign using FCC-compliant UWB radios, and presents a powerful localization algorithm that is fully distributed, can cope with a wide variety of scenarios, and requires little communication overhead.
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