Abstract

Deep neural networks have recently received a great deal of attention in applications requiring classification of radar returns, including radar-based human activity recognition for security, smart homes, assisted living, and biomedicine. However, acquiring a sufficiently large training dataset remains a daunting task due to the high human costs and resources required for radar data collection. In this article, an extended approach to adversarial learning is proposed for generation of synthetic radar micro-Doppler signatures that are well adapted to different environments. The synthetic data are evaluated using visual interpretation, analysis of kinematic consistency, data diversity, dimensions of the latent space, and saliency maps. A principle-component analysis-based kinematic-sifting algorithm is introduced to ensure that synthetic signatures are consistent with physically possible human motions. The synthetic dataset is used to train a 19-layer deep convolutional neural network to classify micro-Doppler signatures acquired from an environment different from that of the dataset supplied to the adversarial network. An overall accuracy of 93% is achieved on a dataset that contains multiple aspect angles (0°, 30°, and 45° as well as 60°), with 9% improvement as a result of kinematic sifting.

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