Infrastructureless approach for ubiquitous user location tracking in construction environments
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Elsevier
Abstract
Current research trends in the field of automation in construction focus on automating traditional tasks with the intent of improving the accuracy and streamlining the flow of information throughout the construction process. One viable, potentially automated task is site inspection. This consists of a set of vital yet notoriously laborious, costly, time-consuming, and error-prone activities, when performed manually by site inspectors. Incorporating recent contributions from the fields of inertial-based step detection and vision-based egomotion estimation, this paper develops and evaluates infrastructureless inertial and visual systems to ubiquitously localize people in construction environments. The implementation and the results obtained from validation experiments demonstrate that a lightweight, portable, and cost-effective hybrid inertial-vision tracking system provides the most promise for accurate, precise, and robust localization of mobile users in construction environments. It achieves, on average, an accuracy of around 1% of the total traveled distance, compared to the INS and vision systems that provide an accuracy of less than 2% and 3% of the total traveled distance respectively. © 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Keywords
Computer vision, Construction, Inertial navigation, Infrastructureless, Mobile computing, Motion, Structure from, Ubiquitous tracking, Cost effectiveness, Inertial navigation systems, Tracking (position), Ubiquitous computing, Automation in construction, Construction environment, Construction process, Ego-motion estimation, Inertial navigations, Vision tracking systems