Publication | Closed Access
Collaborative sensor networking towards real-time acoustical beamforming in free-space and limited reverberance
58
Citations
13
References
2004
Year
EngineeringSensor ArrayLocalization TechniqueWireless Acoustical TestbedReal-time Acoustical BeamformingLocalizationSpeaker LocalizationSystems EngineeringAcoustic Signal ProcessingAcoustic CameraCollaborative Sensor NetworkingDoa Bearing CrossingsComputer EngineeringWireless NetworkingRf LocalizationSignal ProcessingArray ProcessingLimited ReverberanceWireless Sensor NetworksSpeech Processing
Wireless sensor networks have been attracting increasing research interest given the recent advances in microelectronics, array processing, and wireless networking. Consisting of a large collection of small, wireless, low-cost, integrated sensing, computing and communicating nodes capable of performing various demanding collaborative space-time processing tasks, wireless sensor network technology poses various unique design challenges, particularly for real-time operation. We review the approximate maximum-likelihood (AML) method for source localization and direction-of-arrival (DOA) estimation. Then, we consider the use of least-squares method (LS) method applied to DOA bearing crossings to perform source localization. A novel virtual array model applicable to the AML-DOA estimation method is proposed for reverberant scenarios. Details on the wireless acoustical testbed are given. We consider the use of Compaq iPAQ 3760s, which are handheld, battery-powered device normally meant to be used as personal organizers (PDAs), as sensor nodes. The iPAQ provide a reasonable balance of cost, availability, and functionality. It has a build in StrongARM processor, microphone, codec for acoustic acquisition and processing, and a PCMCIA bus for external IEEE 802.11b wireless cards for radio communication. The iPAQs form a distributed sensor network to perform real-time acoustical beamforming. Computational times and associated real-time processing tasks are described. Field measured results for linear, triangular, and square subarrays in free-space and reverberant scenarios are presented. These results show the effective and robust operation of the proposed algorithms and their implementations on a real-time acoustical wireless testbed.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1