The community of indoor positioning research has identified the need for a paradigm shift towards more reproducible and open research dissemination. Despite recent efforts to openly share data and code, accompanying research results with Open Research Data (ORD) is far from being the de facto standard option for publications in the indoor positioning field. The lack of recognized public benchmarks and the rathe...
Transparency and verifiability have long been regarded as cornerstones of the scientific ethos and practice. However, persistent reproducibility challenges across numerous disciplines have brought renewed attention to the imperative for widespread adoption of Open Science practices. These considerations are particularly relevant to the research field of Indoor Positioning. Open Data and Open Code sharing are gr...
Indoor positioning is a thriving research area, which is slowly gaining market momentum. Its applications are mostly customized, ad hoc installations; ubiquitous applications analogous to Global Navigation Satellite System for outdoors are not available because of the lack of generic platforms, widely accepted standards and interoperability protocols. In this context, the indoor positioning and indoor navigatio...
The importance of reproducibility and transparency in scientific research has always been a cornerstone of the scientific Ethos. Recently, after identifying the challenges in terms of reproducibility in various research fields, the necessity of wide adoption of Open Science practices has become prominent. The field of Indoor Positioning and Indoor Navigation is no exception to these realizations. The current wo...
Microsoft proposed RADAR in 2000, the first indoor positioning system based on Wi-Fi fingerprinting. Since then, the indoor research community has worked not only to improve the base estimator but also on finding an optimal RSS data representation. The long-term objective is to find a positioning system that minimises the mean positioning error. Despite the relevant advances in the last 23 years, a disruptive s...
Every year, for ten years now, the IPIN competition has aimed at evaluating real-world indoor localisation systems by testing them in a realistic environment, with realistic movement, using the EvAAL framework. The competition provided a unique overview of the state-of-the-art of systems, technologies, and methods for indoor positioning and navigation purposes. Through fair comparison of the performance achieve...
The evaluation of Indoor Positioning Systems (IPSs) mostly relies on local deployments in the researchers' or partners' facilities. The complexity of preparing comprehensive experiments, collecting data, and considering multiple scenarios usually limits the evaluation area and, therefore, the assessment of the proposed systems. The requirements and features of controlled experiments cannot be generalized since ...
IPIN 2019 Competition, sixth in a series of IPIN competitions, was held at the CNR Research Area of Pisa (IT), integrated into the program of the IPIN 2019 Conference. It included two on-site real-time Tracks and three off-site Tracks. The four Tracks presented in this paper were set in the same environment, made of two buildings close together for a total usable area of 1000 m2 outdoors and and 6000 m2 indoors...