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Meaningful test and evaluation of indoor localization systems in semi-controlled environments
Citation Link: https://doi.org/10.15480/882.4312
Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Publikationsdatum
2022-04-06
Sprache
English
Author
Institut
Enthalten in
Volume
22
Issue
7
Article Number
2797
Citation
Sensors 22 (7): 2797 (2022)
Publisher DOI
Scopus ID
Publisher
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
Despite their enormous potential, the use of indoor localization systems (ILS) remains seldom. One reason is the lack of market transparency and stakeholders’ trust in the systems’ performance as a consequence of insufficient use of test and evaluation (T&E) methodologies. The heterogeneous nature of ILS, their influences, and their applications pose various challenges for the design of a methodology that provides meaningful results. Methodologies for building-wide testing exist, but their use is mostly limited to associated indoor localization competitions. In this work, the <i>T&E 4iLoc Framework</i> is proposed—a methodology for T&E of indoor localization systems in semi-controlled environments based on a system-level and black-box approach. In contrast to building-wide testing, T&E in semi-controlled environments, such as test halls, is characterized by lower costs, higher reproducibility, and better comparability of the results. The limitation of low transferability to real-world applications is addressed by an application-driven design approach. The empirical validation of the <i>T&E 4iLoc Framework</i>, based on the examination of a contour-based light detection and ranging (LiDAR) ILS, an ultra wideband ILS, and a camera-based ILS for the application of automated guided vehicles in warehouse operation, demonstrates the benefits of T&E with the <i>T&E 4iLoc Framework</i>.
Schlagworte
indoor localization
test and evaluation
methodology
benchmarking
DDC Class
600: Technik
Publication version
publishedVersion
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