4.8 Article

AutoFi: Toward Automatic Wi-Fi Human Sensing via Geometric Self-Supervised Learning

Journal

IEEE INTERNET OF THINGS JOURNAL
Volume 10, Issue 8, Pages 7416-7425

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JIOT.2022.3228820

Keywords

Wireless fidelity; Sensors; Adaptation models; Data models; Gesture recognition; Feature extraction; Self-supervised learning; Activity recognition; channel state information (CSI); deep learning; gait recognition; self-supervised learning; Wi-Fi sensing

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Wi-Fi sensing technology has been proven superior in smart homes due to its cost-effectiveness and privacy-preserving nature. This article introduces AutoFi, a Wi-Fi sensing model based on a novel geometric self-supervised learning algorithm, which effectively utilizes randomly captured low-quality CSI samples and achieves cross-task knowledge transfer.
Wi-Fi sensing technology has shown superiority in smart homes among various sensors for its cost-effective and privacy-preserving merits. It is empowered by channel state information (CSI) extracted from Wi-Fi signals and advanced machine learning models to analyze motion patterns in CSI. Many learning-based models have been proposed for kinds of applications, but they severely suffer from environmental dependency. Though domain adaptation methods have been proposed to tackle this issue, it is not practical to collect high-quality, well-segmented, and balanced CSI samples in a new environment for adaptation algorithms, but randomly captured CSI samples can be easily collected. In this article, we first explore how to learn a robust model from these low-quality CSI samples, and propose AutoFi, an annotation-efficient Wi-Fi sensing model based on a novel geometric self-supervised learning algorithm. The AutoFi fully utilizes unlabeled low-quality CSI samples that are captured randomly, and then transfers the knowledge to specific tasks defined by users, which is the first work to achieve cross-task transfer in Wi-Fi sensing. The AutoFi is implemented on a pair of Atheros Wi-Fi APs for evaluation. The AutoFi transfers knowledge from randomly collected CSI samples into human gait recognition and achieves state-of-the-art performance. Furthermore, we simulate cross-task transfer using public data sets to further demonstrate its capacity for cross-task learning. For the UT-HAR and Widar data sets, the AutoFi achieves satisfactory results on activity recognition and gesture recognition without any prior training. We believe that AutoFi takes a huge step toward automatic Wi-Fi sensing without any developer engagement. Our codes have been included in https://github.com/xyanchen/Wi-Fi-CSI-Sensing-Benchmark.

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