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Positioning and Utilizing Sensors on a 3-D Terrain Part I—Theory and Modeling

Haluk Rahmi Topcuoglu, Murat Ermiş, Mesut Sifyan

Year
2010
Citations
39

Abstract

Positioning multiple sensors for acquisition of a given environment is one of the fundamental research areas in various fields, such as military scouting, computer vision, and robotics. In this paper, we propose a new model for the problem of sensor deployment. Deploying and configuring a set of given sensors on a synthetically generated 3-D terrain have multiple objectives on conflicting attributes: maximizing the visibility of the given terrain, maximizing the stealth of the sensors, and minimizing the cost of the sensors used. Since they are utility-independent, these complementary and conflicting objectives are modeled by a multiplicative total utility function, based on multiattribute utility theory. The total utility function proposed in this paper can also be adapted for various military scouting missions with different characteristics.

Keywords

TerrainSoftware deploymentComputer scienceRoboticsArtificial intelligenceFunction (biology)Set (abstract data type)VisibilityOperations researchReal-time computing

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