Author:
Basiri Anahid,Amirian Pouria,Winstanley Adam,Marsh Stuart,Moore Terry,Gales Guillaume
Abstract
Many navigation services, such as car navigation services, provide users with praxic navigational instructions (such as “turn left after 200 metres, then turn right after 150 metres”), however people usually associate directions with visual cues (e.g. “turn right at the square”) when giving navigational instructions in their daily conversations. Landmarks can play an equally important role in navigation and routing services. Landmarks are unique and easy-to-recognise and remember features; therefore, in order to remember when exploring an unfamiliar environment, they would be assets. In addition, Landmarks can be found both indoors and outdoors and their locations are usually fixed. Any positioning techniques which use landmarks as reference points can potentially provide seamless (indoor and outdoor) positioning solutions. For example, users can be localised with respect to landmarks if they can take a photograph of a registered landmark and use an application for image processing and feature extraction to identify the landmark and its location. Landmarks can also be used in pedestrian-specific path finding services. Landmarks can be considered as an important parameter in a path finding algorithm to calculate a route passing more landmarks (to make the user visit a more tourist-focussed area, pass along an easier-to-follow route, etc.). Landmarks can also be used as a part of the navigational instructions provided to users; a landmark-based navigation service makes users sure that they are on the correct route, as the user is reassured by seeing the landmark whose information/picture has just been provided as a part of navigational instruction. This paper shows how landmarks can help improve positioning and praxic navigational instructions in all these ways.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Ocean Engineering,Oceanography
Reference30 articles.
1. Amirian P. , Basiri A. , Gales G. , Winstanley A.C. and McDonald J. (2015). The Next Generation of Navigational Services Using OpenStreetMap Data: The Integration of Augmented Reality and Graph Databases, OpenStreetMap in GIScience, Lecture Notes in Geoinformation and Cartography 2015, 211–228.
2. Elias B. (2003). Determination of Landmarks and Reliability Criteria for Landmarks. Technical Paper, ICA Commission on Map Generalization, 5th Workshop on Progress in Automated Map Generalization, IGN, Paris, France.
3. Beyond the Cognitive Map
4. Ambulatory Position Tracking of Prosthetic Limbs Using Multiple Satellite Aided Inertial Sensors and Adaptive Mixing
Cited by
17 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献