I. Introduction
Modern microelectromechanical system (MEMS) inertial measurement units (IMUs) are small (a few mm2), cheap (several dollars a piece), energy efficient, and pervasive. As a low-cost yet powerful sensing modality, they have received a large amount of research effort and deeply weave into a wide range of applications. For instance, today’s smartphones come with embedded IMUs while users can use them for different location-based services, e.g., indoor navigation, localization, and outdoor trajectory analysis [1]. Moreover, emerging cyber gadgets, such as wristbands and VR/AR headsets, also actively utilize IMUs to provide continuous health monitoring [2], accurate activity tagging [3], and immersive gaming experiences [4]. On the side of robots and autonomous systems, IMUs are a long-standing sensing solution to navigation and grasping tasks [5].