
via Tufts University
The vast number of devices connected on 5G networks can help locate themselves, rather than rely on centralized “anchors”
Anticipating a critical strain on the ability of fifth generation (5G) networks to keep track of a rapidly growing number of mobile devices, engineers at Tufts University have come up with an improved algorithm for localizing and tracking these products that distributes the task among the devices themselves. It is a scalable solution that could meet the demands of a projected 50 billion connected products in the Internet-of-Things by 2020, and would enable a widening range of location-based services. The results of the Tufts study were published today in Proceedings of the IEEE, the leading peer-reviewed scientific journal published by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers.
Currently, positioning of wireless devices is centralized, depending on “anchors” with known locations such as cell towers or GPS satellites to communicate directly with each device. As the number of devices increases, anchors must be installed at higher density. Centralized positioning can become unwieldy as the number of items to track grows significantly.
As an alternative to centralized solutions, the authors’ method of distributed localization in a 5G network has the devices locate themselves without all of them needing direct access to anchors. Sensing and calculations are done locally on the device, so there is no need for a central coordinator to collect and process the data.
“The need to provide location awareness of every device, sensor, or vehicle, whether stationary or moving, is going to figure more prominently in the future,” said Usman Khan, Ph.D., associate professor of electrical and computer engineering in the School of Engineering at Tufts University. “There will be applications for tracking assets and inventory, healthcare, security, agriculture, environmental science, military operations, emergency response, industrial automation, self-driving vehicles, robotics – the list is endless. The virtually limitless potential of the Internet-of-Things requires us to develop smart decentralized algorithms,” said Khan, who is the paper’s corresponding author.
The self-localization algorithm developed by Khan and his colleagues makes use of device-to-device communication, and so can take place indoors (e.g., in offices and manufacturing facilities), underground, underwater, or under thick cloud cover. This is an advantage over GPS systems, which not only can go dark under those conditions, but also adds to the cost and power requirements of the device.
The mobility of the devices makes self-localization challenging. The key is to obtain positions rapidly to track them in real-time, which means the calculations must be simplified without sacrificing accuracy. The authors accomplished this by substituting the non-linear position calculations, which are computationally demanding and can miss their mark if the initial guess at position is in the wrong place, with a linear model that quickly and reliably converges on the accurate position of the device. The move to a computationally simpler linear calculation emerges as a result of the devices measuring their location relative to each other or a point representing the “center of mass” of neighboring devices, rather than having all of them reference a set of stationary anchors. Convergence to accurate positions is extremely fast, making real-time tracking of a large number of devices feasible.
“In addition to preparing us for a future of ubiquitous connected devices, this approach could relieve pressure on the current infrastructure by removing the need to install a lot of transmitters (anchors) in buildings and neighborhoods,” said Khan.
Learn more: Researchers devise more effective location awareness for the Internet-of-(many)-Things
The Latest on: Internet-of-Things
via Google News
The Latest on: Internet-of-Things
- Automotive Internet of Things Market Growth Prospects, Scope, Potential and Addressing Structure, Forecast Till 2030 | Apple Inc and Google LLCon January 22, 2021 at 11:36 am
Pune, Maharashtra, India, January 22 2021 (Wiredrelease) MarketResearch.Biz :Automotive Internet of Things Market Overview: The report provides quantitative and qualitative information on the global ...
- Kontakt.io Launching Cloud-enabled Portal Beam: The Internet of Things in One Thingon January 22, 2021 at 6:54 am
Kontakt.io, the leader in indoor IoT location services, today announced the launch of Portal Beam, a 9-in-1 cloud-enabled sensor ...
- Internet of Things Market Comprehensive Insight by Growth Rate, Trends, Industry Status, Key Players Forecast till 2026on January 22, 2021 at 1:39 am
Jan (The Expresswire) -- The overall internet of things market is expected to grow from USD 190.0 Billion in 2018 to USD 1,102.6 Billion by 2026 ...
- IIoT (Industrial Internet of Things) Technology Market Strategy And Remarkable Growth Rate By 2026 | Fortune Business Insightson January 21, 2021 at 9:21 pm
Investments in Information technologies by companies and increasing cloud adoption are expected to drive the global ...
- Ars Technicast special edition, part 1: The Internet of Things goes to waron January 21, 2021 at 8:30 am
Welcome to a special edition of the Ars Technicast! Ars has partnered with Northrop Grumman to produce a two-part series looking at the evolution of connectivity on the modern battlefield—how the ...
- Industrial Internet-of-Things Market to Witness Stunning Growth | Amazon, Google, Apple, Cisco Systemson January 20, 2021 at 9:40 pm
Latest released the research study on Global Industrial Internet of Things Market offers a detailed overview of the factors influencing the global business scope Industrial Internet of Things Market ...
- Internet of Things Software Market Is Booming Worldwide with Google, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Amazon Web Serviceson January 20, 2021 at 8:29 am
What's Ahead in the Global Internet of Things Software Market? Benchmark yourself with strategic steps and conclusions recently published by AMA ...
- The IoT Community – Internet of Things Community Announces Valuer Has Joined its Elite Iot Ecosystem as a Platinum Level Corporate Memberon January 20, 2021 at 7:31 am
The IoT Community (Internet of Things Community), the world’s largest community of CxOs and IoT professionals and practitioners, announces Valuer the emerging data-driven innovation platform, has ...
- Global Internet Of Things (IoT) Revenues To Jump By 53% And Hit $677B By 2025on January 20, 2021 at 1:01 am
IoT has become one of the most important technologies globally, allowing seamless communication between people, processes, an ...
via Bing News