The International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences. Vol. XXXVII. Part B5. Beijing 2008
providers were permitted to use the location capabilities in the
handset and the network for commercial purposes. This directly
initiated the development of the wireless location-based services
(LBS) market. The key players that emerged in the wireless
device manufacturing industry are SnapTrack (acquired by
Qualcomm in 2000;
http://www.qualcomm.com/about/qct_redirect.html) and SiRF
(http://www.sirf.com/). The important development for the new
markets for LBS solutions was the emergence of GPS-based
PND business by companies such as Garmin, Navman, Trimble,
Magellan, and TomTom. The current trend is that increasingly
more devices, such as, for example, the Blackberries, become
connected wirelessly and provide some navigation information.
Also, the iPhone launched by Apple supports Google maps on
the device, and it is expected that the next generation iPhone
will offer a significant improvement in geographic navigation
(GPS) and management tools
(http://lbs.gpsworld.com/gpslbs/article/articleDetail.jsp?id=466
339&sk=&date=&pageID=2). It is also important to mention
here that high quality and up-to-date digital maps are crucial to
reliable personal navigation. This part of the consumer market is
well covered by Navteq (http://www.navteq.com/) and Tele
Atlas (http://www.teleatlas.com/index.htm) who deliver digital
maps and dynamic content that power the world’s demand for
navigation and location-based applications.
The improvements in GPS receiver size, performance, and cost
over the past few years have stimulated an upsurge of consumer
GPS products, which followed an increased public awareness of
the potential utility of GPS. The GPS-based consumer products,
such as car navigation systems, GPS-enabled PDAs and
locatable mobile phones, have flooded the marketplace. Yet,
general misunderstanding of the GPS limitations often leads to
consumer dissatisfaction due to the low position accuracy their
devices may furnish, or a lack of any positioning information
under some circumstances. Consumers expect a navigation
product simply to work, regardless of the conditions and the
surrounding environment.
Although high-sensitivity receivers, or assisted-GPS (A-GPS),
enable operation with much weaker signals (even indoors),
there are still situations where even A-GPS does not provide
sufficiently accurate position fix within an acceptable time
interval. Consequently, users in high multipath or extremely
weak signal environments may experience low positioning
accuracy and/or long delays in achieving a position fix. Even if
some contingency § strategies, taking effect when A-GPS fails,
are implemented to provide the user with a gracefully degrading
position fix service, the position fix will eventually become
unavailable. As much as the consumer market would like to
avoid such situations, they are inevitable, unless some
augmentation is used with GPS or even A-GPS. This
increasingly leads to multisensor solutions that are not yet very
§ According to
http://lbs.gpsworld.com/gpslbs/content/printContentPopup.isp7i
d=262078 “The simplest fall-back method is Cell ID, by which
a user’s position is assumed to coincide with the location of the
cell tower handling the user’s call, or the centroid of the
coverage area of that particular cell. In either case, the assumed
user’s position could be wildly inaccurate, depending on the
network’s tower spacing. Researchers in the United Kingdom
have invented a fail-back technique that uses network signal
timings to provide a user’s phone (terminal) with a synthetic
clock, synchronized to GPS Time. With such an accurate clock,
the terminal can be positioned using a similar technique to that
used by GPS but by using the network signals themselves.”
common within the consumer market, but substantial research
and conceptual work has been conducted in recent years to
develop reliable and ubiquitous personal navigation device for
pedestrians (e.g., Retscher 2004a and b; Retscher and Thienelt,
2004; Kourogi et al., 2006; Lachapelle et al., 2006) as well as
military and emergency personnel (Grejner-Brzezinska et al.,
2006a and b, and 2007a and b; Moafipoor et al., 2007), who
operate in environments where GPS may not be always
available, while their navigation fix is crucial for the combat or
emergency mission.
Pedestrian and personal navigation** systems require continuous
positioning and tracking of a mobile user with a certain
positioning accuracy and reliability. However, navigating in
urban and other GPS-impeded environments, such as mixed
indoor and outdoor areas, is a very challenging task. These
systems require multiple navigation technologies to be
integrated together to form a multisensor system, as mentioned
above, in order to serve as many different environments as
possible for seamless and reliable navigation. Example
technologies suitable for multisensor solutions supporting
personal navigation include GNSS (Global Navigation Satellite
System), ground-based RF systems, such as pseudolites (e.g.,
Barnes et al., 2003a and b) suitable for confined and indoor
environs, as well as cellular phone positioning for absolute
position determination, dead reckoning sensors (e.g., magnetic
compass, gyroscopes, accelerometers and barometers) to
determine orientation, distance traveled and height. For location
determination of a pedestrian in multi-storey buildings the
Wireless Local Area Networks (WLAN) (e.g., Wang et al.,
2003; Li et al., 2006), or transponders or beacons installed in
the buildings (e.g., Pahlavan et al., 2002) are increasingly used.
Other indoor positioning systems include so-called Active
Badge Systems (e.g., Hightower and Boriello, 2001). These
methods can provide few-meter accuracy for indoor tracking
and positioning. Robustness of the ultra wideband (UWB)
signal to multipath fading and its high penetration capability
makes it another technique suitable for indoor positioning. The
indoor UWB-based navigation systems (fundamentally
designed for wireless communication, navigation being usually
a tag-along application), which work in the bandwidths in
excess of 1 GHz, measure accurate time of arrival (ToA), the
difference of ToA of the received signals for the estimation of
distance to mobile user (e.g., Pahlavan et al., 2002; Win and
Scholtz, 2002; Ni et al., 2007). The UWB ranging and
communication scheme may employ one or more of the
following techniques: time division multiple access (TDMA),
frequency division multiple access (FDMA) or code division
multiple access (CDMA). A direct sequence (DS)-CDMA
scheme is a preferred UWB scheme for providing ranging
resolution and identification of base stations (see, e.g.,
http://www.wipo. int/pctdb/en/wo.jsp?IA=US2005004936&DIS
PLAY=DESC for more details). Another method considered in
indoor navigation is based on optical tracking systems also
referred to as image-based systems. This method has been
researched by, for example, Veth and Raquet (2006a and b) in
connection with inertial technology. In general, the image-based
tracking systems could provide high positioning accuracy and
resolution, but these are a function of the type of sensors used
(primarily its angular resolution), distance between the target
and the sensor, specific application and the environment
(outdoor vs. indoor).
Personal navigation is understood here as navigation of
military and emergency personnel, while pedestrian navigation
refers to all other uses for location/navigation of a mobile user.