SPLGNIAug 24, 2024

SGP-RI: A Real-Time-Trainable and Decentralized IoT Indoor Localization Model Based on Sparse Gaussian Process with Reduced-Dimensional Inputs

arXiv:2409.00078v11 citationsh-index: 7
Originality Incremental advance
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This addresses the need for efficient and secure indoor localization on resource-constrained IoT devices, offering an incremental improvement over centralized methods.

The paper tackles the problem of indoor localization for IoT devices by proposing a real-time-trainable and decentralized model based on Sparse Gaussian Process with Reduced-dimensional Inputs (SGP-RI), which achieves comparable localization performance to standard Gaussian Process models using less than half the training samples.

Internet of Things (IoT) devices are deployed in the filed, there is an enormous amount of untapped potential in local computing on those IoT devices. Harnessing this potential for indoor localization, therefore, becomes an exciting research area. Conventionally, the training and deployment of indoor localization models are based on centralized servers with substantial computational resources. This centralized approach faces several challenges, including the database's inability to accommodate the dynamic and unpredictable nature of the indoor electromagnetic environment, the model retraining costs, and the susceptibility of centralized servers to security breaches. To mitigate these challenges we aim to amalgamate the offline and online phases of traditional indoor localization methods using a real-time-trainable and decentralized IoT indoor localization model based on Sparse Gaussian Process with Reduced-dimensional Inputs (SGP-RI), where the number and dimension of the input data are reduced through reference point and wireless access point filtering, respectively. The experimental results based on a multi-building and multi-floor static database as well as a single-building and single-floor dynamic database, demonstrate that the proposed SGP-RI model with less than half the training samples as inducing inputs can produce comparable localization performance to the standard Gaussian Process model with the whole training samples. The SGP-RI model enables the decentralization of indoor localization, facilitating its deployment to resource-constrained IoT devices, and thereby could provide enhanced security and privacy, reduced costs, and network dependency. Also, the model's capability of real-time training makes it possible to quickly adapt to the time-varying indoor electromagnetic environment.

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