Indoor Occupant Positioning System Using Active RFID Deployment and Particle Filters

Abstract: 

This article describes a method for indoor positioning of human-carried active Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags based on the Sampling Importance Resampling (SIR) particle filtering algorithm. To use particle filtering methods, it is necessary to furnish statistical state transition and observation distributions. The state transition distribution is obstacle-aware and sampled from a precomputed accessibility map. The observation distribution is empirically determined by ground truth RSS measurements while moving the RFID tags along a known trajectory. From this data, we generate estimates of the sensor measurement distributions, grouped by distance, between the tag and sensor. A grid of 24 sensors is deployed in an office environment, measuring Received Signal Strength (RSS) from the tags, and a multithreaded program is written to implement the method. We discuss the accuracy of the method using a verification data set collected during a field-operational test.

Author: 
Weekly, Kevin
Zou, Han
Xie, Lihua
Jia, Qing-Shan
Bayen, Alexandre M.
Publication date: 
May 1, 2014
Publication type: 
Conference Paper
Citation: 
Weekly, K., Zou, H., Xie, L., Jia, Q.-S., & Bayen, A. M. (2014). Indoor Occupant Positioning System Using Active RFID Deployment and Particle Filters. 2014 IEEE International Conference on Distributed Computing in Sensor Systems, 35–42. https://doi.org/10.1109/DCOSS.2014.53