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Localization in Ultra Narrow Band IoT Networks: Design Guidelines and Trade-Offs

Tijdschriftbijdrage - Tijdschriftartikel

Localization in long-range Internet of Things networks is a challenging task, mainly due to the long distances and low bandwidth used. Moreover, the cost, power, and size limitations restrict the integration of a GPS receiver in each device. In this work, we introduce a novel received signal strength indicator (RSSI) based localization solution for ultra narrow band (UNB) long-range IoT networks such as Sigfox. The essence of our approach is to leverage the existence of a few GPS-enabled sensors (GSN)s in the network to split the wide coverage into classes, enabling RSSI based fingerprinting of other sensors (SN)s. By using machine learning algorithms at the network backed-end, the proposed approach does not impose extra power, payload, or hardware requirements. To comprehensively validate the performance of the proposed method, a measurement-based dataset that has been collected in the city of Antwerp is used. We show that a location classification accuracy of 80% is achieved by virtually splitting a city with a radius of 2.5km into seven classes. Moreover, separating classes, by increasing the spacing between them, brings the classification accuracy up-to 92% based on our measurements. Furthermore, when the density of GSN nodes is high enough to enable device-to-device communication, using multilateration, we improve the probability of localizing SNs with an error lower than 20m by 40% in our measurement scenario.
Tijdschrift: IEEE Internet of Things Journal
ISSN: 2327-4662
Issue: 6
Volume: 6
Pagina's: 1 - 11
Jaar van publicatie:2019
Toegankelijkheid:Open