Track-id

Activity Determination based on Wi-Fi Monitoring

Conference Paper (2016)
Authors

S.C. van der Spek (OLD Urban Design)

E. Verbree (OLD Department of GIS Technology)

C.W. Quak (OLD Department of GIS Technology)

IJ.D.G. Groeneveld

R. Sulzer

E. Theocharous

M.S. Tryfona

O.T. Willems

Y. Xu

Research Group
OLD Urban Design
Copyright
© 2016 S.C. van der Spek, E. Verbree, C.W. Quak, IJ.D.G. Groeneveld, R. Sulzer, E. Theocharous, M.S. Tryfona, O.T. Willems, Y. Xu
More Info
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Publication Year
2016
Language
English
Copyright
© 2016 S.C. van der Spek, E. Verbree, C.W. Quak, IJ.D.G. Groeneveld, R. Sulzer, E. Theocharous, M.S. Tryfona, O.T. Willems, Y. Xu
Research Group
OLD Urban Design
Pages (from-to)
145-150
ISBN (print)
978-1-907075-02-5
Reuse Rights

Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download, forward or distribute the text or part of it, without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license such as Creative Commons.

Abstract

The distribution of people in buildings, the occupancy of lecture-, work- and study places and the accessibility of facilities are essential information at university campuses who have to cope with limited and even shrinking budgets and huge, rising real estate costs. Only little insight is gained in both occupancy and movement patterns with traditional counting techniques and user-based questionnaires. Management teams state that rooms and facilities are hardly used, though staff and students complain about overcrowded facilities and limited flexibility. Actual and accurate data on a 24/7 scale with high-granularity is missing.
In general Facility- and Asset Management lacks efficient methods for realtime, comprehensive and high-granularity information of location, capacity and use of tangible and intangible assets. Asset management could benefit from more detailed, more accurate and longitudinal data on assets, providing more insight into efficiency and effectiveness on different levels of scale through time.
Existing technologies could provide a platform delivering those required insights. Navigation- and communication technologies such as GNSS, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, RFID can be used to ‘locate’ users, estimate intensities and reveal patterns of movement and patterns of use. For Asset management indoor
localisation is essential.

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