A MAN working in a skyscraper has a heart attack and phones for help, but he fails to tell the emergency operator which floor he鈥檚 on. Paramedics then have to waste precious minutes searching the 40-storey building, and the man dies.
Researchers at the University of Toronto in Canada and chipmaker Intel have developed a system that they say could help prevent such deaths. Called , it can estimate the location of callers inside high-rise buildings to within two floors. If used in New York鈥檚 102-storey Empire State Building, it could cut the floor space that would have to be searched from 204,000 to 2000 square metres.
In a city, cellphones pick up signals from many tens of masts but to make a call they only use the masts sending the strongest signals. Signals can be used to triangulate a phone鈥檚 position using the three nearest masts, but it is only accurate to 50 metres and can鈥檛 distinguish between floors.
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Skyloc exploits the fact that every point in a city is bathed in a unique combination of radio signals from hundreds of masts, each at different strengths and frequencies. Skyloc uses this miasma to generate a 鈥減osition fingerprint鈥 that is unique both to the phone鈥檚 horizontal coordinates and vertical position.
On each floor of three high-rise buildings, a team led by Alex Vershavsky of the University of Toronto recorded the signals received from 29 masts. Specially developed software successfully allowed a phone to transmit these position fingerprints during calls. These were then matched against a database of all fingerprints from the building to pinpoint the caller鈥檚 floor. Vershavsky says lives could be saved if all tall buildings were 鈥渞adio-mapped鈥 and phones were programmed to transmit their position fingerprints.
Amanda Goode, a UK-based expert in cellphone forensics, sees other uses for the technology. 鈥淭he ideas behind this could be useful in kidnap or serious crime investigations,鈥 she says.
鈥淭his system could be very useful in kidnap or serious crime investigations鈥