Abstract

The high linear correlation between the smartphone magnetometer readings in close proximity can be exploited for physical human contact detection, which could be useful for such applications as infectious disease contact tracing or social behavior monitoring. Alternative approaches using other capabilities in smartphones have aspects that do not fit well with the human contact detection. Using Wi-Fi or cellular fingerprints have larger localization errors than close human contact distances. Bluetooth beacons could reveal the identity of the transmitter, threatening the privacy of the user. Also, using sensors such as GPS does not work for indoor contacts. However, the magnetometer correlation check works best in human contact distances that matter in infectious disease transmissions or social interactions. The omni-present geomagnetism makes it work both indoors and outdoors, and the measured magnetometer values do not easily reveal the identity and the location of the smartphone. One issue with the magnetometer-based contact detection, however, is the energy consumption. Since the contacts can take place anytime, the magnetometer sensing and recording should be running continuously. Therefore, how we address the energy requirement for the extended and continuous operation can decide the viability of the whole idea. However, then, we note that almost all existing magnetometer-based applications such as indoor location and navigation have used high sensing frequencies, ranging from 10 Hz to 200 Hz. At these frequencies, we measure that the time to complete battery drain in a typical smartphone is shortened by three to twelve hours. The heavy toll raises the question as to whether the magnetometer-based contact detection can avoid such high sensing rates while not losing the contact detection accuracy. In order to answer the question, we conduct a measurement-based study using independently produced magnetometer traces from three different countries. Specifically, we gradually remove high frequency components in the traces, while observing the correlation changes. As a result, we find that the human coexistence detection indeed tends to be no less, if not more, effective at the sampling frequency of 1 Hz or even less. This is because unlike the other applications that require centimeter-level precision, the human contacts detected anywhere within a couple of meters are valid for our purpose. With the typical smartphone battery capacity and at the 1 Hz sensing, the battery consumption is well below an hour, which is smaller by more than two hours compared with 10 Hz sampling and by almost eleven hours compared with 200 Hz sampling. With other tasks running simultaneously on smartphones, the energy saving aspect will only become more critical. Therefore, we conclude that sensing the ambient magnetic field at 1 Hz is sufficient for the human contact monitoring purpose. We expect that this finding will have a significant practicability implication in the smartphone magnetometer-based contact monitoring applications in general.

Highlights

  • In just 17 years into the 21st century, we have already been through several novel pandemics such as SARS (2003), Swine Flu (2009), MERS (2012), Ebola (2014), and Zika (2015)

  • The strategy we take for energy saving in this paper is to find the lowest sampling frequency for the smartphone magnetometer that do not hurt the coexistence detection performance

  • The 1 Hz sampling we propose in this paper leads to more than two hours longer operating time than 10 Hz sampling on a typical smartphone, not to mention the greater differences it makes against even higher sampling frequencies

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Summary

Introduction

In just 17 years into the 21st century, we have already been through several novel pandemics such as SARS (2003), Swine Flu (2009), MERS (2012), Ebola (2014), and Zika (2015). On the brink of an infectious disease epidemic, the most urgent task is to trace those who made contacts with the confirmed case(s), in order to cut the chain of infection and prevent it from growing into a wider epidemic. Contact graphs are constructed through interviews with confirmed cases, by asking who they remember they met and where they visited. This is a hugely costly and time consuming task. There is a pressing need to develop a technology-based solution [2] to the contact tracing that overcomes these issues, so that we can cope with future infectious disease epidemics more efficiently and precisely

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