Compressive mobile sensing in robotic mapping
Document Type
Conference Proceeding
Publication Date
12-11-2009
Abstract
This paper presents a novel approach, compressive mobile sensing, to use mobile sensors to sample and reconstruct sensing fields based on compressive sensing. Compressive sensing is an emerging research field based on the fact that a small number of linear measurements can recover a sparse signal without losing any useful information. Using compressive sensing, the signal can be recovered by a sampling rate that is much lower than the requirements from the well-known Shannon sampling theory. The proposed compressive mobile sensing approach has not only the merits of compressive sensing, but also the flexibility of different sampling densities for areas of different interests. A special measurement process makes it different from normal compressive sensing. Adopting importance sampling, compressive mobile sensing enables mobile sensors to move adaptively and acquire more samples from more important areas. A motion planning algorithm is designed based on the result of sparsity analysis to locate areas of more interests. At last, experimental results of 2-D mapping are presented as an implementation compressive mobile sensing. © 2009 IEEE.
Publication Title
2009 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems, IROS 2009
Recommended Citation
Huang, S.,
&
Tan, J.
(2009).
Compressive mobile sensing in robotic mapping.
2009 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems, IROS 2009, 3070-3075.
http://doi.org/10.1109/IROS.2009.5354364
Retrieved from: https://digitalcommons.mtu.edu/michigantech-p/10665