Access Network Service Laboratories, NTT, Inc




Abstract:With the advent of the 6G era, Integrated Sensing and Communications (ISAC) has attracted increasing attention. One representative of use cases is crowd flow estimation on outdoor streets. However, most existing studies have focused on indoor environments or vehicles, and demonstrations of outdoor crowd flow estimation using commercial LTE base station remain limited. This study addresses this use case and proposes an analysis of a crowd flow estimation method using Reference Signal Received Power (RSRP) obtained from a commercial LTE base station. Specifically, pedestrian counts derived from a camera-based object recognition algorithm were associated with the variance of RSRP. The features obtained from the variance were quantitatively evaluated by combining a CatBoost regression model with SHapley Additive exPlanations (SHAP) analysis. Through this investigation, we clarified that an optimal variance window size for RSRP is 0.1 to 0.2 seconds and that enlarging the counting area increased the features obtained from the variance of RSRP, for machine learning. Consequently, this study is the first to quantitatively demonstrate the effectiveness of outdoor crowd flow estimation using commercial LTE, while also revealing the characteristic behavior of variance window size and counting area size in feature design.




Abstract:Wireless sensing is a promising technology for future wireless communication networks to realize various application services. Wireless local area network (WLAN)-based localization approaches using channel state information (CSI) have been investigated intensively. Further improvements in detection performance will depend on selecting appropriate feature information and determining the placements of distributed antenna elements. This paper presents a proposal of an enhanced device-free WLAN-based localization scheme with beam-tracing based antenna placement optimization and spatially localized regression, where beam-forming weights (BFWs) are used as feature information for training machine-learning (ML)-based models localized to partitioned areas. By this scheme, the antenna placement at the access point (AP) is determined by solving a combinational optimization problem with beam-tracing between AP and station (STA) without knowing the CSI. Additionally, we propose the use of localized regression to improve localization accuracy with low complexity, where classification and regression based ML models are used for coarse and precise estimations of the target position. We evaluate the proposed scheme effects on localization performance in an indoor environment. Experiment results demonstrate that the proposed antenna placement and localized regression scheme improve the localization accuracy while reducing the required complexity for both off-line training and on-line localization relative to other reference schemes.