SPNov 2, 2021
A MIMO Radar-Based Metric Learning Approach for Activity RecognitionFady Aziz, Omar Metwally, Pascal Weller et al.
Human activity recognition is seen of great importance in the medical and surveillance fields. Radar has shown great feasibility for this field based on the captured micro-Doppler (μ-D) signatures. In this paper, a MIMO radar is used to formulate a novel micro-motion spectrogram for the angular velocity (μ-ω) in non-tangential scenarios. Combining both the μ-D and the μ-ω signatures have shown better performance. Classification accuracy of 88.9% was achieved based on a metric learning approach. The experimental setup was designed to capture micro-motion signatures on different aspect angles and line of sight (LOS). The utilized training dataset was of smaller size compared to the state-of-the-art techniques, where eight activities were captured. A few-shot learning approach is used to adapt the pre-trained model for fall detection. The final model has shown a classification accuracy of 86.42% for ten activities.
SPOct 16, 2021
A MIMO Radar-based Few-Shot Learning Approach for Human-IDPascal Weller, Fady Aziz, Sherif Abdulatif et al.
Radar for deep learning-based human identification has become a research area of increasing interest. It has been shown that micro-Doppler ($μ$-D) can reflect the walking behavior through capturing the periodic limbs' micro-motions. One of the main aspects is maximizing the number of included classes while considering the real-time and training dataset size constraints. In this paper, a multiple-input-multiple-output (MIMO) radar is used to formulate micro-motion spectrograms of the elevation angular velocity ($μ$-$ω$). The effectiveness of concatenating this newly-formulated spectrogram with the commonly used $μ$-D is investigated. To accommodate for non-constrained real walking motion, an adaptive cycle segmentation framework is utilized and a metric learning network is trained on half gait cycles ($\approx$ 0.5 s). Studies on the effects of various numbers of classes (5--20), different dataset sizes, and varying observation time windows 1--2 s are conducted. A non-constrained walking dataset of 22 subjects is collected with different aspect angles with respect to the radar. The proposed few-shot learning (FSL) approach achieves a classification error of 11.3 % with only 2 min of training data per subject.