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Ubiquitous Indoor Localization: The Indoor Equivalent of GPS
Thursday, November 1, 2018, 11:00 am-12:30 pm Calendar
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Abstract
Although GPS has been considered a ubiquitous outdoor localization technology, we are still far from a similar technology for indoor environments. While a number of technologies have been proposed for indoor localization, they are isolated efforts that are way from a true ubiquitous localization system. A ubiquitous indoor positioning system is envisioned to be deployed on a large scale worldwide, with minimum overhead, to work with heterogeneous devices, and to allow users to roam seamlessly from indoor to outdoor environments. Such a system will enable a wide set of applications including worldwide seamless direction finding between indoor locations, enhancing first responders' safety by providing anywhere localization and floor plans, and providing a richer environment for location-aware social networking applications. 
 
In this talk, we will describe an architecture for the ubiquitous indoor positioning system (IPS) and the challenges that have to be addressed to materialize it. We will then focus on the feasibility of different components of the architecture including accurate infrastructure-less indoor localization and automating the construction of a worldwide indoor floor plan database. This includes constructing different layer of semantics for the floor plans. We will finally identify different research directions for addressing the challenges of realizing a true ubiquitous IPS system.
 
This talk is a part of the ACM Distinguished Speaker Program. Professor Ashok Agrawala is the host for this talk.
Bio
MOUSTAFA YOUSSEF is a professor at Alexandria University and Egypt-Japan University of Science and Technology (E-JUST) and founder & director of the Wireless Research Center of Excellence, Egypt. His research interests include mobile wireless networks, mobile computing, location determination technologies, pervasive computing, and network security. He has tens of issued and pending patents. He is the Lead Guest Editor of the upcoming IEEE Computer Special Issue on Transformative Technologies, an Associate Editor for ACM TSAS, served as an Area Editor of ACM MC2R as well as on the organizing and technical committees of numerous prestigious conferences. He is the recipient of the 2003 University of Maryland Invention of the Year award, the 2010 TWAS-AAS-Microsoft Award for Young Scientists, the 2013 and 2014 COMESA Innovation Award, the 2013 ACM SIGSpatial GIS Conference Best Paper Award, the 2017 Egyptian State Award, multiple Google Research Awards, among many others. He is an ACM Distinguished Speaker and an ACM Distinguished Scientist.  

 

This talk is organized by Brandi Adams