Yunjiao Zhou

CV
h-index27
10papers
263citations
Novelty53%
AI Score42

10 Papers

CVAug 22, 2022
MetaFi: Device-Free Pose Estimation via Commodity WiFi for Metaverse Avatar Simulation

Jianfei Yang, Yunjiao Zhou, He Huang et al. · berkeley

Avatar refers to a representative of a physical user in the virtual world that can engage in different activities and interact with other objects in metaverse. Simulating the avatar requires accurate human pose estimation. Though camera-based solutions yield remarkable performance, they encounter the privacy issue and degraded performance caused by varying illumination, especially in smart home. In this paper, we propose a WiFi-based IoT-enabled human pose estimation scheme for metaverse avatar simulation, namely MetaFi. Specifically, a deep neural network is designed with customized convolutional layers and residual blocks to map the channel state information to human pose landmarks. It is enforced to learn the annotations from the accurate computer vision model, thus achieving cross-modal supervision. WiFi is ubiquitous and robust to illumination, making it a feasible solution for avatar applications in smart home. The experiments are conducted in the real world, and the results show that the MetaFi achieves very high performance with a PCK@50 of 95.23%.

CVNov 14, 2023
TENT: Connect Language Models with IoT Sensors for Zero-Shot Activity Recognition

Yunjiao Zhou, Jianfei Yang, Han Zou et al. · berkeley

Recent achievements in language models have showcased their extraordinary capabilities in bridging visual information with semantic language understanding. This leads us to a novel question: can language models connect textual semantics with IoT sensory signals to perform recognition tasks, e.g., Human Activity Recognition (HAR)? If so, an intelligent HAR system with human-like cognition can be built, capable of adapting to new environments and unseen categories. This paper explores its feasibility with an innovative approach, IoT-sEnsors-language alignmEnt pre-Training (TENT), which jointly aligns textual embeddings with IoT sensor signals, including camera video, LiDAR, and mmWave. Through the IoT-language contrastive learning, we derive a unified semantic feature space that aligns multi-modal features with language embeddings, so that the IoT data corresponds to specific words that describe the IoT data. To enhance the connection between textual categories and their IoT data, we propose supplementary descriptions and learnable prompts that bring more semantic information into the joint feature space. TENT can not only recognize actions that have been seen but also ``guess'' the unseen action by the closest textual words from the feature space. We demonstrate TENT achieves state-of-the-art performance on zero-shot HAR tasks using different modalities, improving the best vision-language models by over 12%.

CVMar 18, 2023
Augmenting and Aligning Snippets for Few-Shot Video Domain Adaptation

Yuecong Xu, Jianfei Yang, Yunjiao Zhou et al.

For video models to be transferred and applied seamlessly across video tasks in varied environments, Video Unsupervised Domain Adaptation (VUDA) has been introduced to improve the robustness and transferability of video models. However, current VUDA methods rely on a vast amount of high-quality unlabeled target data, which may not be available in real-world cases. We thus consider a more realistic \textit{Few-Shot Video-based Domain Adaptation} (FSVDA) scenario where we adapt video models with only a few target video samples. While a few methods have touched upon Few-Shot Domain Adaptation (FSDA) in images and in FSVDA, they rely primarily on spatial augmentation for target domain expansion with alignment performed statistically at the instance level. However, videos contain more knowledge in terms of rich temporal and semantic information, which should be fully considered while augmenting target domains and performing alignment in FSVDA. We propose a novel SSA2lign to address FSVDA at the snippet level, where the target domain is expanded through a simple snippet-level augmentation followed by the attentive alignment of snippets both semantically and statistically, where semantic alignment of snippets is conducted through multiple perspectives. Empirical results demonstrate state-of-the-art performance of SSA2lign across multiple cross-domain action recognition benchmarks.

CVSep 29, 2023
AdaPose: Towards Cross-Site Device-Free Human Pose Estimation with Commodity WiFi

Yunjiao Zhou, Jianfei Yang, He Huang et al.

WiFi-based pose estimation is a technology with great potential for the development of smart homes and metaverse avatar generation. However, current WiFi-based pose estimation methods are predominantly evaluated under controlled laboratory conditions with sophisticated vision models to acquire accurately labeled data. Furthermore, WiFi CSI is highly sensitive to environmental variables, and direct application of a pre-trained model to a new environment may yield suboptimal results due to domain shift. In this paper, we proposes a domain adaptation algorithm, AdaPose, designed specifically for weakly-supervised WiFi-based pose estimation. The proposed method aims to identify consistent human poses that are highly resistant to environmental dynamics. To achieve this goal, we introduce a Mapping Consistency Loss that aligns the domain discrepancy of source and target domains based on inner consistency between input and output at the mapping level. We conduct extensive experiments on domain adaptation in two different scenes using our self-collected pose estimation dataset containing WiFi CSI frames. The results demonstrate the effectiveness and robustness of AdaPose in eliminating domain shift, thereby facilitating the widespread application of WiFi-based pose estimation in smart cities.

CVFeb 29, 2024
MaskFi: Unsupervised Learning of WiFi and Vision Representations for Multimodal Human Activity Recognition

Jianfei Yang, Shijie Tang, Yuecong Xu et al.

Human activity recognition (HAR) has been playing an increasingly important role in various domains such as healthcare, security monitoring, and metaverse gaming. Though numerous HAR methods based on computer vision have been developed to show prominent performance, they still suffer from poor robustness in adverse visual conditions in particular low illumination, which motivates WiFi-based HAR to serve as a good complementary modality. Existing solutions using WiFi and vision modalities rely on massive labeled data that are very cumbersome to collect. In this paper, we propose a novel unsupervised multimodal HAR solution, MaskFi, that leverages only unlabeled video and WiFi activity data for model training. We propose a new algorithm, masked WiFi-vision modeling (MI2M), that enables the model to learn cross-modal and single-modal features by predicting the masked sections in representation learning. Benefiting from our unsupervised learning procedure, the network requires only a small amount of annotated data for finetuning and can adapt to the new environment with better performance. We conduct extensive experiments on two WiFi-vision datasets collected in-house, and our method achieves human activity recognition and human identification in terms of both robustness and accuracy.

CVFeb 29, 2024
T3DNet: Compressing Point Cloud Models for Lightweight 3D Recognition

Zhiyuan Yang, Yunjiao Zhou, Lihua Xie et al.

3D point cloud has been widely used in many mobile application scenarios, including autonomous driving and 3D sensing on mobile devices. However, existing 3D point cloud models tend to be large and cumbersome, making them hard to deploy on edged devices due to their high memory requirements and non-real-time latency. There has been a lack of research on how to compress 3D point cloud models into lightweight models. In this paper, we propose a method called T3DNet (Tiny 3D Network with augmEntation and disTillation) to address this issue. We find that the tiny model after network augmentation is much easier for a teacher to distill. Instead of gradually reducing the parameters through techniques such as pruning or quantization, we pre-define a tiny model and improve its performance through auxiliary supervision from augmented networks and the original model. We evaluate our method on several public datasets, including ModelNet40, ShapeNet, and ScanObjectNN. Our method can achieve high compression rates without significant accuracy sacrifice, achieving state-of-the-art performances on three datasets against existing methods. Amazingly, our T3DNet is 58 times smaller and 54 times faster than the original model yet with only 1.4% accuracy descent on the ModelNet40 dataset.

CVDec 13, 2025
M4Human: A Large-Scale Multimodal mmWave Radar Benchmark for Human Mesh Reconstruction

Junqiao Fan, Yunjiao Zhou, Yizhuo Yang et al.

Human mesh reconstruction (HMR) provides direct insights into body-environment interaction, which enables various immersive applications. While existing large-scale HMR datasets rely heavily on line-of-sight RGB input, vision-based sensing is limited by occlusion, lighting variation, and privacy concerns. To overcome these limitations, recent efforts have explored radio-frequency (RF) mmWave radar for privacy-preserving indoor human sensing. However, current radar datasets are constrained by sparse skeleton labels, limited scale, and simple in-place actions. To advance the HMR research community, we introduce M4Human, the current largest-scale (661K-frame) ($9\times$ prior largest) multimodal benchmark, featuring high-resolution mmWave radar, RGB, and depth data. M4Human provides both raw radar tensors (RT) and processed radar point clouds (RPC) to enable research across different levels of RF signal granularity. M4Human includes high-quality motion capture (MoCap) annotations with 3D meshes and global trajectories, and spans 20 subjects and 50 diverse actions, including in-place, sit-in-place, and free-space sports or rehabilitation movements. We establish benchmarks on both RT and RPC modalities, as well as multimodal fusion with RGB-D modalities. Extensive results highlight the significance of M4Human for radar-based human modeling while revealing persistent challenges under fast, unconstrained motion. The dataset and code will be released after the paper publication.

CVNov 19, 2025
Zero-Shot Open-Vocabulary Human Motion Grounding with Test-Time Training

Yunjiao Zhou, Xinyan Chen, Junlang Qian et al.

Understanding complex human activities demands the ability to decompose motion into fine-grained, semantic-aligned sub-actions. This motion grounding process is crucial for behavior analysis, embodied AI and virtual reality. Yet, most existing methods rely on dense supervision with predefined action classes, which are infeasible in open-vocabulary, real-world settings. In this paper, we propose ZOMG, a zero-shot, open-vocabulary framework that segments motion sequences into semantically meaningful sub-actions without requiring any annotations or fine-tuning. Technically, ZOMG integrates (1) language semantic partition, which leverages large language models to decompose instructions into ordered sub-action units, and (2) soft masking optimization, which learns instance-specific temporal masks to focus on frames critical to sub-actions, while maintaining intra-segment continuity and enforcing inter-segment separation, all without altering the pretrained encoder. Experiments on three motion-language datasets demonstrate state-of-the-art effectiveness and efficiency of motion grounding performance, outperforming prior methods by +8.7\% mAP on HumanML3D benchmark. Meanwhile, significant improvements also exist in downstream retrieval, establishing a new paradigm for annotation-free motion understanding.

CVMar 24, 2025
Generative Dataset Distillation using Min-Max Diffusion Model

Junqiao Fan, Yunjiao Zhou, Min Chang Jordan Ren et al.

In this paper, we address the problem of generative dataset distillation that utilizes generative models to synthesize images. The generator may produce any number of images under a preserved evaluation time. In this work, we leverage the popular diffusion model as the generator to compute a surrogate dataset, boosted by a min-max loss to control the dataset's diversity and representativeness during training. However, the diffusion model is time-consuming when generating images, as it requires an iterative generation process. We observe a critical trade-off between the number of image samples and the image quality controlled by the diffusion steps and propose Diffusion Step Reduction to achieve optimal performance. This paper details our comprehensive method and its performance. Our model achieved $2^{nd}$ place in the generative track of \href{https://www.dd-challenge.com/#/}{The First Dataset Distillation Challenge of ECCV2024}, demonstrating its superior performance.

SPMay 12, 2023
MM-Fi: Multi-Modal Non-Intrusive 4D Human Dataset for Versatile Wireless Sensing

Jianfei Yang, He Huang, Yunjiao Zhou et al.

4D human perception plays an essential role in a myriad of applications, such as home automation and metaverse avatar simulation. However, existing solutions which mainly rely on cameras and wearable devices are either privacy intrusive or inconvenient to use. To address these issues, wireless sensing has emerged as a promising alternative, leveraging LiDAR, mmWave radar, and WiFi signals for device-free human sensing. In this paper, we propose MM-Fi, the first multi-modal non-intrusive 4D human dataset with 27 daily or rehabilitation action categories, to bridge the gap between wireless sensing and high-level human perception tasks. MM-Fi consists of over 320k synchronized frames of five modalities from 40 human subjects. Various annotations are provided to support potential sensing tasks, e.g., human pose estimation and action recognition. Extensive experiments have been conducted to compare the sensing capacity of each or several modalities in terms of multiple tasks. We envision that MM-Fi can contribute to wireless sensing research with respect to action recognition, human pose estimation, multi-modal learning, cross-modal supervision, and interdisciplinary healthcare research.