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Visible light positioning: a roadmap for international standardization

410

Citations

12

References

2013

Year

TLDR

The widespread use of white LEDs offers a flexible, accurate, ubiquitous indoor positioning opportunity, but comprehensive international standards are needed to avoid incompatible proprietary systems. The article discusses diverse applications of future visible light positioning systems and their implications for designing an effective standard. Positioning uses LED‑transmitted signals, derived from signal power, angle, or other properties, while ensuring no visible flicker and maintaining energy‑efficient illumination.

Abstract

The widespread introduction of white LEDs for illumination provides a unique opportunity to create an indoor positioning system that is flexible, accurate, and ubiquitous. Signals transmitted by the LEDs are used to determine the position of a person or object within a room. To take full advantage of this new opportunity, it is essential that comprehensive and robust international standards are developed before a plethora of incompatible proprietary systems flood the market. In this article, we discuss the very diverse range of potential applications of these future systems and their implications for the design of a new standard. Another consideration is that the transmission of positioning signals must not compromise the primary function of the LEDs, which is energy-efficient illumination, so visible flicker must be avoided. Position information can be derived from a range of properties of the received signal, such as the power of the received signal or the angle at which the signal reaches the receiver. The suitability of different techniques for an indoor positioning system is considered. Finally, we discuss the implications each of these aspects has for the design of an effective standard.

References

YearCitations

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