Abstract

WiFi-based human activity recognition explores the correlations between body movement and the reflected WiFi signals to classify different activities. State-of-the-art solutions mostly work on a single WiFi channel and hence are quite sensitive to the quality of a particular channel. Co-channel interference in an indoor environment can seriously undermine the recognition accuracy. In this paper, we for the first time explore wideband WiFi information with advanced deep learning toward more accurate and robust activity recognition. We present a practical Channel Selective Activity Recognition system (CSAR) with Commercial Off-The-Shelf (COTS) WiFi devices. The key innovation is to actively select available WiFi channels with good quality and seamlessly hop among adjacent channels to form an extended channel. The wider bandwidth with more subcarriers offers stable information with a higher resolution for feature extraction. Conventional classification tools, e.g., hidden Markov model and k-nearest neighbors, however, are not only sensitive to feature distortion but also not smart enough to explore the time-scale correlations from the extracted spectrogram. We accordingly explore advanced deep learning tools for this application context. We demonstrate an integration of channel selection and long short term memory network (LSTM), which seamlessly combine the richer time and frequency features for activity recognition. We have implemented a CSAR prototype using Intel 5300 WiFi cards. Our real-world experiments show that CSAR achieves a stable recognition accuracy around 95 percent even in crowded wireless environments (compared to 80 percent with state-of-the-art solutions that highly depend on the quality of the working channel). We have also examined the impact of environments and persons, and the results reaffirm its robustness.

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