Measuring the quantity of people in a given space has many applications, ranging from marketing to safety. A family of novel approaches to measuring crowd size relies on inexpensive Wi-Fi equipment, taking advantage of the fact that Wi-Fi signals get distorted by people鈥檚 presence, so by identifying these distortion patterns, we can estimate the number of people in such a given space. In this work, we refine methods that leverage Channel State Information (CSI), which is used to train a classifier that estimates the number of people placed between a Wi-Fi transmitter and a receiver, and we show that the available multi-link information allows us to achieve substantially better results than state-of-the-art single link or averaging approaches, that is, those that take the average of the information of all channels instead of taking them individually. We show experimentally how the addition of each of the multiple links information helps to improve the accuracy of the prediction from 44% with one link to 99% with 6 links.
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