Home
Scholarly Works
Ubiquitous Acoustic Sensing on Commodity IoT...
Journal article

Ubiquitous Acoustic Sensing on Commodity IoT Devices: A Survey

Abstract

With the proliferation of Internet-of-Things (IoT) devices, acoustic sensing attracts significant attention in recent years. It exploits acoustic transceivers such as microphones and speakers beyond their primary functions, namely recording and playing, to enable novel applications and new user experiences. In this paper, we present the first systematic survey on recent advances in ubiquitous acoustic sensing using commodity IoT hardware with a frequency range below 24 kHz. We propose a general framework that categorizes main building blocks of acoustic sensing systems. This framework encompasses three layers, i.e., device, core technique, and application. The device layer includes basic hardware components, acoustic platforms, as well as the air-borne and structure-borne channel characteristics. The core technique layer encompasses key mechanisms to generate acoustic signals (waveforms) and to extract useful temporal, spatial, and spectral information from received signals. The application layer builds upon the functions offered by the core techniques to realize different acoustic sensing applications. We highlight unique challenges due to the limitations of physical devices and acoustic channels and how they are mitigated or overcame by core processing techniques and application-specific solutions. Finally, research opportunities and future directions are discussed to spawn further in-depth investigation on IoT-enabled ubiquitous acoustic sensing.

Authors

Cai C; Zheng R; Luo J

Journal

IEEE Communications Surveys & Tutorials, Vol. 24, No. 1, pp. 432–454

Publisher

Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)

Publication Date

January 1, 2022

DOI

10.1109/comst.2022.3145856

ISSN

1553-877X

Contact the Experts team