In-Home Daily-Life Captioning Using Radio Signals
This addresses privacy concerns for in-home monitoring by enabling activity captioning through walls and in low-visibility settings, though it is an incremental improvement over existing captioning methods.
The paper tackles the problem of captioning daily life activities in homes using privacy-preserving radio signals instead of cameras, achieving accurate captions even in dark or occluded conditions where video-based methods fail.
This paper aims to caption daily life --i.e., to create a textual description of people's activities and interactions with objects in their homes. Addressing this problem requires novel methods beyond traditional video captioning, as most people would have privacy concerns about deploying cameras throughout their homes. We introduce RF-Diary, a new model for captioning daily life by analyzing the privacy-preserving radio signal in the home with the home's floormap. RF-Diary can further observe and caption people's life through walls and occlusions and in dark settings. In designing RF-Diary, we exploit the ability of radio signals to capture people's 3D dynamics, and use the floormap to help the model learn people's interactions with objects. We also use a multi-modal feature alignment training scheme that leverages existing video-based captioning datasets to improve the performance of our radio-based captioning model. Extensive experimental results demonstrate that RF-Diary generates accurate captions under visible conditions. It also sustains its good performance in dark or occluded settings, where video-based captioning approaches fail to generate meaningful captions. For more information, please visit our project webpage: http://rf-diary.csail.mit.edu