Automatic Determination of Validity of Input Data Used in Ellipsoid Fitting MARG Calibration Algorithms
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Olivares, Alberto; Ruiz-García, Gonzalo; Olivares Ruiz, Gonzalo; Gorriz Sáez, Juan Manuel; Ramírez Pérez De Inestrosa, JavierEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Calibration Accelerometer Magnetometer MARG (Magnetic Angular Rate and Gravity) MEMS (Microelectromechanical) Automatic Validation Fuzzy FLS (Fuzzy Logic System) Thresholding
Fecha
2013Referencia bibliográfica
Olivares, A.; et al. Automatic Determination of Validity of Input Data Used in Ellipsoid Fitting MARG Calibration Algorithms. Sensors, 13(9): 11797-11817 (2013). [http://hdl.handle.net/10481/29879]
Patrocinador
This work was partly supported by the MICINN under the TEC2012-34306 project, the MEEC under the TIN2012-32039 (hpMooN) and the Consejería de Innovación, Ciencia y Empresa (Junta de Andalucía, Spain) under the Excellence Projects P09-TIC-4530 and P11-TIC-7103.Resumen
Ellipsoid fitting algorithms are widely used to calibrate Magnetic Angular Rate and Gravity (MARG) sensors. These algorithms are based on the minimization of an error function that optimizes the parameters of a mathematical sensor model that is subsequently applied to calibrate the raw data. The convergence of this kind of algorithms to a correct solution is very sensitive to input data. Input calibration datasets must be properly distributed in space so data can be accurately fitted to the theoretical ellipsoid model. Gathering a well distributed set is not an easy task as it is difficult for the operator carrying out the maneuvers to keep a visual record of all the positions that have already been covered, as well as the remaining ones. It would be then desirable to have a system that gives feedback to the operator when the dataset is ready, or to enable the calibration process in auto-calibrated systems. In this work, we propose two different algorithms that analyze the goodness of the distributions by computing four different indicators. The first approach is based on a thresholding algorithm that uses only one indicator as its input and the second one is based on a Fuzzy Logic System (FLS) that estimates the calibration error for a given calibration set using a weighted combination of two indicators. Very accurate classification between valid and invalid datasets is achieved with average Area Under Curve (AUC) of up to 0.98.