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WiFi signals can now be used to count people

Researchers discover a clever system that analyzes how wireless signals are interrupted between two points

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Los Angeles, Jun 9 (PTI) Researchers have demonstrated that a WiFi signal can be used to count the number of people in a given space, an advance that may one day--among other things--lead to improved search-and-rescue efforts during a disaster.

"Our approach can estimate the number of people walking in an area, based on only the received power measurements of a WiFi link," said Yasamin Mostofi, a professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of California, Santa Barbara. This approach does not require people to carry WiFi-enabled telecommunications devices for them to be counted, Mostofi said.

To enable people-counting through WiFi, researchers put two WiFi cards at opposite ends of a target area, a roughly 70-square-metre space. Using only the received power measurements of the link between the two cards, their approach can estimate the number of people walking in that area. So far, they have successfully tested with up to and including nine people in both indoor and outdoor settings.

This people-counting method relies in large part on the variations in the received wireless signal, according to the researchers: the presence of people attenuates the signal in the direct line of sight between the WiFi cards if a person crosses between, and human bodies also scatter the signal resulting in a phenomenon called multi-path fading, even when they are not in the direct line of sight path.

By developing a probabilistic mathematical framework based on these two key phenomena, the researchers have proposed a way of estimating the number of people walking within the monitored space. The findings have potential for many diverse applications including the ability to estimate the number of people in public locations, which could be used for security, crowd control, or even optimizing the strength of air conditioning and heating based on occupancy levels.

Security and search-and-rescue operations could also take advantage of occupancy estimation, researchers said. Previous work in the research lab involved imaging stationary objects and humans through walls with WiFi signals, and Mostofi plans to eventually bring the two projects together in future.

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