The ability to track pedestrians without any infrastructure support is required by numerous applications in the healthcare, augmented reality, and entertainment industries. In this paper, we present a simple self-contained pedestrian tracking method using a foot-mounted inertial and magnetic sensor module. Traditional methods normally incorporate double integration of the measured acceleration, but such methods are susceptible to the acceleration noise and integration drift. To avoid this issue, alternative approaches which make use of walking dynamics to aggregate individual stride have been explored. The key for stride aggregating is to accurately and reliably detect stride boundary and estimate the associated heading direction for each s...
The wearable inertial/magnetic sensor based human motion analysis plays an important role in many bi...
In this paper, a novel method of sensor based pedestrian dead reckoning is presented using sensors m...
The article of record as published may be found at https://doi.org/10.1109/TIM.2011.2179830A foot mo...
This paper proposes a novel self-contained pedestrian tracking method using a foot-mounted inertial ...
Abstract—This paper presents a sensor-based pedestrian tracking technology that does not rely on any...
In this paper a feasibility study on magnetometer-free sensor fusion in 2D pedestrian position and o...
The wearable inertial/magnetic sensor based human motion analysis plays an important role in many bi...
The challenges of self-contained sensor based pedestrian dead reckoning (PDR) are mainly sensor inst...
The recent development of compact, inexpensive sensors makes it possible to apply self-contained sen...
International audienceThis paper proposes a foot-mounted Zero Velocity Update (ZVU) aided Inertial M...
In this paper, we compare two novel algorithms for pedestrian navigation based on signals collected ...
International audienceThis paper proposes a foot-mounted Zero Velocity Update (ZVU) aided Inertial M...
The wearable inertial/magnetic sensor based human motion analysis plays an important role in many bi...
Pedestrian navigation systems (PNS) using foot-mounted MEMS inertial sensors use zero-velocity updat...
This paper presents a method for an indoor pedestrian localization, based on the data ...
The wearable inertial/magnetic sensor based human motion analysis plays an important role in many bi...
In this paper, a novel method of sensor based pedestrian dead reckoning is presented using sensors m...
The article of record as published may be found at https://doi.org/10.1109/TIM.2011.2179830A foot mo...
This paper proposes a novel self-contained pedestrian tracking method using a foot-mounted inertial ...
Abstract—This paper presents a sensor-based pedestrian tracking technology that does not rely on any...
In this paper a feasibility study on magnetometer-free sensor fusion in 2D pedestrian position and o...
The wearable inertial/magnetic sensor based human motion analysis plays an important role in many bi...
The challenges of self-contained sensor based pedestrian dead reckoning (PDR) are mainly sensor inst...
The recent development of compact, inexpensive sensors makes it possible to apply self-contained sen...
International audienceThis paper proposes a foot-mounted Zero Velocity Update (ZVU) aided Inertial M...
In this paper, we compare two novel algorithms for pedestrian navigation based on signals collected ...
International audienceThis paper proposes a foot-mounted Zero Velocity Update (ZVU) aided Inertial M...
The wearable inertial/magnetic sensor based human motion analysis plays an important role in many bi...
Pedestrian navigation systems (PNS) using foot-mounted MEMS inertial sensors use zero-velocity updat...
This paper presents a method for an indoor pedestrian localization, based on the data ...
The wearable inertial/magnetic sensor based human motion analysis plays an important role in many bi...
In this paper, a novel method of sensor based pedestrian dead reckoning is presented using sensors m...
The article of record as published may be found at https://doi.org/10.1109/TIM.2011.2179830A foot mo...