WiRIM: Resolution Improving Mechanism for Human Sensing With Commodity Wi-Fi

The growing physical (PHY) layer capabilities of Wi-Fi have made it possible to use Wi-Fi signals for both communication and human sensing. Wi-Fi channel state information (CSI) in PHY layer can be obtained from commodity Wi-Fi devices. As CSI can detect the minute environment changes that alter sig...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Xinbin Shen, Lingchao Guo, Zhaoming Lu, Xiangming Wen, Zhihong He
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2019-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8907825/
Description
Summary:The growing physical (PHY) layer capabilities of Wi-Fi have made it possible to use Wi-Fi signals for both communication and human sensing. Wi-Fi channel state information (CSI) in PHY layer can be obtained from commodity Wi-Fi devices. As CSI can detect the minute environment changes that alter signal propagation, it is thus capable of capturing the subtle human activities to provide cost-effective and easy-to-use human sensing. However, the limited bandwidth of each individual Wi-Fi channel fundamentally constrains the resolution of signals, resulting in poor performance of human sensing. In this paper, we present WiRIM, a resolution improving mechanism for Wi-Fi based human sensing. We design a channel switching and aggregation algorithm to extend the effective bandwidth of commodity Wi-Fi signals and improve the performance and efficiency of human sensing applications. With aggregated CSI, WiRIM constructs feature images which contain rich frequency, temporal and spatial characteristics, and then uses a deep learning method to process the extracted features. We propose a cross-location human activity recognition (CLHAR) scenario as a case study. The CLHAR scenario requires a high enough resolution of the Wi-Fi signals to accurately recognize different activities under the interference of tiny changes in human location. The experiments demonstrate the generality and effectiveness of the proposed mechanism.
ISSN:2169-3536