We present a data-driven car occupancy detection algorithm using ultra-wideband radar based on the ResNet architecture. The algorithm is trained on a dataset of channel impulse responses obtained from measurements at three different activity levels of the occupants (i.e. breathing, talking, moving). We compare the presented algorithm against a state-of-the-art car occupancy detection algorithm based on variational message passing (VMP). Our presented ResNet architecture is able to outperform the VMP algorithm in terms of the area under the receiver operating curve (AUC) at low signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs) for all three activity levels of the target. Specifically, for an SNR of −20 dB the VMP detector achieves an AUC of 0.87 while the ResNet architecture achieves an AUC of 0.91 if the target is sitting still and breathing naturally. The difference in performance for the other activities is similar. To facilitate the implementation in the onboard computer of a car we perform an ablation study to optimize the tradeoff between performance and computational complexity for several ResNet architectures. The dataset used to train and evaluate the algorithm is openly accessible. This facilitates an easy comparison in future works.
In this paper, we present a variational inference algorithm that decomposes a signal into multiple groups of related spectral lines. The spectral lines in each group are associated with a group parameter common to all spectral lines within the group. The proposed algorithm jointly estimates the group parameters, the number of spetral lines within a group, and the number of groups exploiting a Bernoulli-Gamma-Gaussian hierarchical prior model which promotes sparse solutions. Aiming to maximize the evidence lower bound (ELBO), variational inference provides analytic approximations of the posterior probability density functions (PDFs) and also gives estimates of the additional model parameters such as the measurement noise variance. While the activation variables of the groups and the associated group parameters (such as fundamental frequencies and the corresponding higher order harmonics) are estimated as point estimates, the remaining parameters such as the complex amplitudes of the spectral lines and their precision parameters are estimated as approximate posterior PDFs.We demonstrate the versatility and performance of the proposed algorithm on three different inference problems. In particular, the proposed algorithm is applied to the multipitch estimation problem, the radar signal-based extended object estimation problem, and variational mode decomposition (VMD) using synthetic measurements and to real multi-pitch estimation problem using the Bach-10 dataset. The results show that the proposed algorithm outperforms state-of-the-art model-based and pre-trained algorithms on all three inference problems.
We present a variational message passing (VMP) approach to detect the presence of a person based on their respiratory chest motion using multistatic ultra-wideband (UWB) radar. In the process, the respiratory motion is estimated for contact-free vital sign monitoring. The received signal is modeled by a backscatter channel and the respiratory motion and propagation channels are estimated using VMP. We use the evidence lower bound (ELBO) to approximate the model evidence for the detection. Numerical analyses and measurements demonstrate that the proposed method leads to a significant improvement in the detection performance compared to a fast Fourier transform (FFT)-based detector or an estimator-correlator, since the multipath components (MPCs) are better incorporated into the detection procedure. Specifically, the proposed method has a detection probability of 0.95 at −20 dB signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), while the estimator-correlator and FFT-based detector have 0.32 and 0.05, respectively.
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