Publication | Closed Access
MagnifiSense
46
Citations
16
References
2015
Year
Unknown Venue
Wearable SystemMobile SensingKinesiologyAssistive TechnologyEngineeringPattern RecognitionBiometricsPresent MagnifisenseWearable TechnologyComputer EngineeringDistinct Electromagnetic RadiationHealth MonitoringUnderlying Electrical ComponentsTechnologyActivity RecognitionWearable SensorElectromagnetic CompatibilityHealth Sciences
The different electronic devices we use on a daily basis produce distinct electromagnetic radiation due to differences in their underlying electrical components. We present MagnifiSense, a low-power wearable system that uses three passive magneto-inductive sensors and a minimal ADC setup to identify the device a person is operating. MagnifiSense achieves this by analyzing near-field electromagnetic radiation from common components such as the motors, rectifiers, and modulators. We conducted a staged, in-the-wild evaluation where an instrumented participant used a set of devices in a variety of settings in the home such as cooking and outdoors such as commuting in a vehicle. MagnifiSense achieves a classification accuracy of 82.6% using a model-agnostic classifier and 94.0% using a model-specific classifier. In a 24-hour naturalistic deployment, MagnifiSense correctly identified 25 of the total 29 events, while achieving a low false positive rate of 0.65% during 20.5 hours of non-activity.
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