To read this content please select one of the options below:

iPOS: a fault‐tolerant and adaptive multi‐sensor positioning architecture with QoS guarantees

Jürgen Bohn (Institute for Pervasive Computing Distributed Systems Group ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland)

Sensor Review

ISSN: 0260-2288

Article publication date: 3 July 2007

329

Abstract

Purpose

To describe the architecture of iPOS (short for iPAQ positioning system), a novel fault‐tolerant and adaptive self‐positioning system with quality‐of‐service (QoS) guarantees for resource‐limited mobile devices.

Design/methodology/approach

The iPOS architecture is based on a novel sensor modelling technique in combination with a probabilistic data‐fusion engine, which is capable of efficiently combining the location information obtained from an arbitrary number of heterogeneous location sensors. As a proof of concept, the paper present a prototypical implementation for handheld devices, which was evaluated by means of practical experiments.

Findings

A major advantage of the iPOS positioning system is its extensibility and flexibility, which is achieved by means of an open plugin architecture and the support of global positioning coordinates according to the WGS‐84 standard. The iPOS system scales very well with respect to the number of sensor plugins that can be operated in parallel. The main limiting factor for the number of supported active plugins is the amount of available system resources on the MoD. With regard to recognition, the experimental results indicate a good accuracy of the fusion‐based positioning system in comparison to the accuracy of the individual sensing technologies. Thanks to the explicit modelling of reliable sensor events, the iPOS system is capable of providing QoS guarantees to applications with regard to the achieved positioning accuracy.

Research limitations/implications

During the experiments, the author recognized time synchronisation as an important challenge that should be addressed as part of future work.

Practical implications

The system enables resource‐restricted mobile devices and computerised objects to exploit computing resources found in their immediate physical vicinity (locality).

Originality/value

The paper presents a novel lightweight sensor‐fusion architecture for fault‐tolerant and adaptive self‐positioning that performs well on resource‐limited mobile devices. A special feature of the developed data‐fusion architecture is the application of a novel event modelling technique that enables the positioning system to give QoS guarantees under certain conditions.

Keywords

Citation

Bohn, J. (2007), "iPOS: a fault‐tolerant and adaptive multi‐sensor positioning architecture with QoS guarantees", Sensor Review, Vol. 27 No. 3, pp. 239-249. https://doi.org/10.1108/02602280710758192

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2007, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Related articles