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Improved Mobile User Localization

IP Title
RADIATOR LOCALIZATION
Technology Benefits
More accurate localizationRelies on a single base station (versus triangulation); could also be used with multiple base stationsCuts computational complexity
Technology Application
Software processed at base stations or on cloud-based platformsPertains to any device communication with a base station (e.g., wireless electronics, ‘smart’ cars, etc.) Can work with researcher’s CAP MIMO antenna technologies
Detailed Technology Description
The rapid proliferation of wireless devices has caused a surge in data rates. Higher frequencies including millimeter wave frequencies (30-300 GHz) are being explored to address the spectrum crunch.At such high frequencies, channel signatures become richer and more informative. This presents new opportunities as well as challenges when trying to determine the location of a smartphone or other mobile device – a process called localization.Existing techniques use information provided by a signal’s line-of-sight (LoS) path (including angle of arrival, time difference of arrival or received signal strength) to triangulate the user’s location from two base stations. A major drawback to this technique is that LoS propagation is not always guaranteed in a real-world environment filled with obstacles and scatter.A UW–Madison researcher has developed a localization method using sparse angle-delay channel signatures. The new method exploits both LoS and non-LoS propagation paths for improved performance. Using measured channel signatures, a statistical pattern classifier is designed to determine a device’s location from the signals that it sends to the base station. Pattern matching is performed on the signal received at the base station using a database of statistical classifier information, and finally a location is computed. The database is based on various ‘cells’ or ‘regions’ that are used to decrease complexity during the pattern matching.
Application Date
Aug 8, 2014
Application No.
9,763,216
Others

WARF reference number P110040US01 describes the researcher’s continuous aperture phased MIMO (CAP MIMO) system for enhanced wireless communications.

http://www.warf.org/technologies/summary/P110040US01.cmsx

*Abstract
The Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF) is seeking commercial partners interested in developing a new method for calculating the location of wireless devices using channel signature data.
*IP Issue Date
Sep 12, 2017
*IP Publication Date
Dec 15, 2016
*Principal Investigator

Name: Akbar Sayeed

Department:

Country/Region
USA

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Mobile Device