Traditional Wi-Fi-based floor identification methods mainly have been tested in small experimental scenarios, and generally, their accuracies drop significantly when applied in real large and multistorey environments. The main challenge… Click to show full abstract
Traditional Wi-Fi-based floor identification methods mainly have been tested in small experimental scenarios, and generally, their accuracies drop significantly when applied in real large and multistorey environments. The main challenge emerges when the complexity of Wi-Fi signals on the same floor exceeds the complexity between the floors along the vertical direction, leading to a reduced floor distinguishability. A second challenge regards the complexity of Wi-Fi features in environments with atrium, hollow areas, mezzanines, intermediate floors, and crowded signal channels. In this article, we propose an adaptive Wi-Fi-based floor identification algorithm to achieve accurate floor identification also in these environments. Our algorithm, based on the Wi-Fi received signal strength indicator and spatial similarity, first identifies autonomous blocks parcelling the whole environment. Then, local floor identification is performed through the proposed Wi-Fi models to fully harness the Wi-Fi features. Finally, floors are estimated through the joint optimization of the autonomous blocks and the local floor models. We have conducted extensive experiments in three real large and multistorey buildings greater than 140 000 m$^2$ using 19 different devices. Finally, we show a comparison between our proposal and other state-of-the-art algorithms. Experimental results confirm that our proposal performs better than other methods, and it exhibits an average accuracy of 97.24%.
               
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