Positioning and Technologies for Mobility

Објавено: July 3, 2023
1. Course Title Positioning and Technologies for Mobility
2. Code 4ФЕИТ10019
3. Study program 11-IBS, 20-IMSA
4. Organizer of the study program (unit, institute, department) Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Information Technologies
5. Degree (first, second, third cycle) Second cycle
6. Academic year/semester I/1   7.    Number of ECTS credits 6.00
8. Lecturer Dr Slavche Pejoski
9. Course Prerequisites
10. Course Goals (acquired competencies):

The first objective of the course is to provide basic understanding of the concepts of positioning, navigation and communication systems for smart mobility. The second objective of the course is to provide abilities for development of applications based on positioning in intelligent transport systems.

11. Course Syllabus:

Overview of location-based services. Basics of localization: parameters and measurements, infrastructures and protocols, spatial-temporal reference systems, positioning methods. Localization processing: navigation equations, algorithms for solution nad accuracy. Technologies and systems: Terrestrial radio-localization systems: positioning in cellular positioning (GSM, UMTS, 4G, 5G) and in short-range systems for indoor positioning (WiFi, Bluetooth, ZigBee, UWB, RF-ID). Satellite systems: GPS, Galileo, GLONASS, Beidou/Compass, signals and spreading codes, navigation message, receiver structure. Introduction to intelligent transport systems (ITS): architecture and elements, technologies, examples and applications. Software tools and platforms for implementation of ITS. Utilization of location based services in mobility based applications. Traffic monitoring: sensors and communication systems for identification or counting of vehicles/passengers/equipment, probe vehicles and floating car data, fleet management, electronic toll collection, on demand transport ordering. Fundamentals of traffic modeling and control. Overview of communication technologies for transportation and safety: cellular, satellite, dedicated short-range communications, vehicle-to-vehicle/vehicle-to-infrastructure communications, communication systems for signaling and control.

12. Learning methods:

Interactive lectures, individual or group projects, home works, workshops and seminars

13. Total number of course hours 180
14. Distribution of course hours 3 + 3
15. Forms of teaching 15.1 Lectures-theoretical teaching 45 hours
15.2 Exercises (laboratory, practice classes), seminars, teamwork 45 hours
16. Other course activities 16.1 Projects, seminar papers 30 hours
16.2 Individual tasks 30 hours
16.3 Homework and self-learning 30 hours
17. Grading
17.1 Exams 10 points
17.2 Seminar work/project (presentation: written and oral) 50 points
17.3. Activity and participation 10 points
17.4. Final exam 30 points
18. Grading criteria (points) up to 50 points 5 (five) (F)
from 51 to 60 points 6 (six) (E)
from 61 to 70 points 7 (seven) (D)
from 71 to 80 points 8 (eight) (C)
from 81 to 90 points 9 (nine) (B)
from 91 to 100 points 10 (ten) (A)
19. Conditions for acquiring teacher’s signature and for taking final exam Completed activities from 15.1
20. Forms of assessment

One partial written exam during the semester (in the middle of the semester) with a duration of 120 minutes or one final written exam in a corresponding exam session with a duration of 120 minutes. Every student must do an independent obligatory project. The student may opt to do an additional supplementary project. The final grade includes points from the exam and the obligatory project work and from the supplementary project (if one is made). Usage of books, hand-written materials or any kind of supplementary text book during the exam is not allowed, also electronic devices are not.

21. Language Macedonian and English
22. Method of monitoring of teaching quality Internal evaluation and polls
23. Literature
23.1.       Required Literature
No. Author Title Publisher Year
1. Ivan G. Petrovski GPS, GLONASS, Galileo, and BeiDou for Mobile Devices: From Instant to Precise Positioning Cambridge University Press 2014
2. Alan Bensky Wireless Positioning Technologies and Applications Artech House 2016
3. Asier Perallos, Unai Hernandez-Jayo, Enrique Onieva, Ignacio Julio García Zuazola Intelligent Transport Systems: Technologies and Applications John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. 2016
23.2.       Additional Literature
No. Author Title Publisher Year
1.  Ian Sharp, Kegen Yu  Wireless Positioning: Principles and Practice  Springer  2019
2.  George J. Dimitrakopoulos, Lorna Uden, Iraklis Varlamis  The Future of Intelligent Transport Systems  Elsevier  2020