Have you had a suspicion that your GPS app is overestimating the distance traveled? If so you are probably correct but the reason isn't an algorithmic glitch. The answer lies in the statistics and it is a strange story.

The mathematics of GPS position finding are complex enough to be left to a code library, but lots of apps will take a set of co-ordinates and work out the distance between each adjacent pair on a path to work out the total distance traveled.

This is so simple and so intuitive that it is hard to see how it could possibly go wrong, but it does.

If you start thinking about how this algorithm could give you the wrong answer then your first conclusion might be that interpolation error might dominate. After all the user is taking a curved path through the world and your GPS calculation is approximating this curve with a set of straight line segments. A moment's thought should reveal that this suggests that the GPS distance will be less than the true path. This is correct, but in practice GPS measurements are taken often enough to make interpolation error small.

The reason is all down to the errors in the positions and how these errors accumulate.

If you make a measurement and it is subject to a random unbiased error then you generally are safe in assuming that the random component will make the quantity larger as often as it makes it smaller. This is how it seems to be with GPS there are errors in positioning that are inherent in the system but certainly don't show any particular bias. Given this observation you would expect the distance between two points located with unbiased random error would also be unbiased, i.e. it would be on average bigger as often as it was smaller than the true value.

However, you would be wrong.

Researchers at the University of Salzburg (UoS), Salzburg Forschungsgesellchaft (SFG), and the Delft University of Technology have done some fairly simple calculations that prove that this is not the case. Irrespective of the distribution of the errors, the expected measured length squared between two points is bigger than the true length squared unless the errors at both points are identical.

That is, if you have two points p1 and p2 and errors in measuring x and y at each, the squared distance measured between them will come out as bigger than the true distance unless the errors are such that they move both points by the same amount - which is highly unlikely in practice.

How can this be?

Consider the two points and the straight line between them. This straight line is the shortest distance between the two points. Now consider random displacements of the two points. The only displacements that reduce the distance are those that move the two points closer together, for example displacements along the line towards each other. The majority of random displacements end up increasing the distance.

This is the reason that unbiased errors end up biasing the distance measurement.

So given that the GPS path is just a sum of distances computed between pairs of points, the total estimated distance is going to be bigger than the true distance because of random errors.

A little more work and the researchers derive a formula for how much of an Over Estimate of Distance OED is produced:

OED= (d2 + var - C)1/2 - d

where var is the variance in the GPS position and C is the autocovariance (correlation) between the errors. Notice that the more correlated the errors, the smaller the over estimate.

To test the theory some experiments were performed. A consumer quality GPS was walked around a 10m square with segment lengths of 1m and 5m. The average measured segments were 1.2m and 5.6m. That is, an overestimate of between 12% and 20%.

Is there anything to be done?

The researchers point out the measurement of speed is not subject to the same problem. GPS devices can measure speed using Doppler shift and this is accurate and not subject to the same measurement bias. It might well be that you can get unbiased distances by integrating velocity measurements over time.

Runners and other athletes have long complained that GPS devices overestimate their performance and there have been lots of suggestions as to why.

This research does seem to have come with the answer - statistics.

More Information

Peter Ranacher, Richard Brunauer, Wolfgang Trutschnig, Stefan Van der Spek & Siegfried Reich (2015): Why GPS makes distances bigger than they are, International Journal of Geographical Information Science, DOI: 10.1080/13658816.2015.1086924

Related Articles

Software Gives Centimeter Positioning With Phone GPS

New Google Maps API

Roads API For A Smooth Accurate Track

Google Maps Embed API

Getting started with Google Maps JavaScript

To be informed about new articles on I Programmer, sign up for our weekly newsletter, subscribe to the RSS feed and follow us on, Twitter, Facebook, Google+ or Linkedin.







Comments



Make a Comment or View Existing Comments Using Disqus





or email your comment to: comments@i-programmer.info