Crowd counting through walls with WiFi

2 mins read

The first demonstration of crowd counting through walls using off-the-shelf WiFi transceivers has been achieved by researchers from UC Santa Barbara.

The technique, which requires only a wireless transmitter and receiver outside the area of interest, could have a variety of applications, researchers say, including smart energy management, retail business planning and security.

"Our proposed approach makes it possible to estimate the number of people inside a room from outside," said Professor Yasamin Mostofi's of UC Santa Barbara. "This approach utilises only WiFi RSSI measurements and does not rely on people to carry a device."

In the team's experiments, one WiFi transmitter and one WiFi receiver are behind walls, outside a room in which a number of people are present. The room can get very crowded with as many as 20 people zigzagging each other. The transmitter sends a wireless signal whose received signal strength (RSSI) is measured by the receiver. Using only such received signal power measurements, the receiver estimates how many people are inside the room - an estimate that closely matches the actual number.

It is noteworthy that the researchers do not do any prior measurements or calibration in the area of interest; their approach has only a very short calibration phase that need not be done in the same area.

Key to this technology is that human presence and movement can result in significant drops - thought of in this project as "events" - in the received signal strength.

"Consider the event sequence that corresponds to the occurrence of significant signal drops," Prof. Mostofi said. "An inter-event time is then the time in between two consecutive events." The researchers' approach for enabling through-wall crowd counting is based on mathematically characterising the information content of the received signal inter-event times, and relating it to the total number of occupants.

"We have observed that while the signal magnitude can be severely attenuated through walls, the inter-event times corresponding to the events of significant signal drops are more robust to wall attenuations," explained Saandeep Depatla, the lead Ph.D. student on this project. So, the researchers' approach is based on exploiting these inter-event times.

More specifically, by modelling the event sequence corresponding to the significant signal drops as a renewal-type process, the researchers say they have utilised mathematical tools from renewal process literature, a theoretical field that has found applications in areas such as reliability and risk analysis. After a long derivation, the researchers were able to mathematically model the statistics of the inter-event times and explicitly relate them to the total number of occupants in the area.

The Mostofi Lab has tested their new technology in different locations, with different wall properties and with several different numbers of people - up to and including 20. They showed a counting accuracy of 2 people or less 100 percent of the time with only one WiFi link.