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Science

This box can see through walls and it could shake up home security

Aura looks for intruders based on the subtle disturbances in wireless spectrum their movements make, like ripples in a lake.

Invisible ripples in wireless spectrum tell Aura if someone's in your house

If the system is armed, and Aura detects motion from someone it doesn't recognize, it will send you an alert, and can even sound an alarm. (Philip Street/CBC News)

When Taj Manku's son was around 11, he asked his father how cellphones worked.

The boy knew there were towers that communicated with the phone, but nothing in the air suggested a connection was being made.

"I said, 'Well, it's sort of a light, but you just can't see it,'" Manku recalls.

If you couldsee what Mankuis describing, you would see the world awash in a perpetual glow, waves of radio frequencies (RF) radiatingfrom thermostats, televisions and children's toys.Mankucalls it "the luminescence of RF," and because wireless technology is everywhere, it'smore prominent today than it was in decades past.

It's this abundance of RF that Manku and his company, Cognitive Systems, has been working to exploit and they want to use it to protectyour home.

It helps if you think of all the world's spectrum like a body of water. Cognitive Systems has built a tiny cube, a home security product called Aura, that can see intruders based on the subtle disturbances in spectrum their movements make like ripples in a lake, explains Manku, the company's chief business development officer.

For a long time, home security products have been variations on a theme mostly cameras, microphonesand infrared motion sensors. They've gotten smarter and more connected along the way, but the underlying sensors haven't changed a whole lot.

Aura is different enough from what others are doing in the home security space that Cognitive Systems thinks it can cleverlycarve out a niche particularly among a privacy-conscious crowd.

The company's three founders, from left to right: chief business development officer Taj Manku, chief executive officer Hugh Hind, and chief technology officer Oleksiy Kravets. (Matthew Braga/CBC News)

"The thing that makes this fundamentally different from a camera-based systemis when you think about a camera-based system, you wouldn't want to put it in a bedroom. You wouldn't want to put it in a bathroom," says Hugh Hind, the company's CEO.

But with a device like Aura, "you can cover the whole house," Hind says. "There's no sense of privacy invasion."

'It's very hard to look like a cat'

According to data compiled by researchfirmIHS Markit, 21 million consumer safety and security devices were shipped to the Americas in 2016. Cameras accounted for half of those shipments, while intrusion sensors made up 38 per cent.

Products that succeed in this spacetend to be simple to use and installand can be controlled remotely using a smartphone app, according to Blake Kozak, an analyst at IHS Markit specializing in smart home and security technology.

Cognitive Systemsis trying to tackle all of these things, with a twist.

Because wireless signals pass through walls and other barriers, a single Aura system can cover an entire house. (Handout/Cognitive Systems)

The Waterloo-based company was founded in June 2014 byManku,HindandOleksiyKravets, the company's chief technology officer allspecialists in wireless engineering, encryptionand computer chip design who met while working atBlackBerry.

Researchers from all over the world have spent the past few years trying to use wireless spectrum to sense motion and objects with various degrees of success. A team at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, for example, hasused wireless signals to see people through walls. Another team from the University of Washington built a home automation system that could be commanded, from anywhere in the home, using only gestures and body motions detected with radio waves.

Cognitive Systems has opted for something a bit more simple. The Aura system consists of a base station and a companion unit, placed at opposite sides of the house. Through a companion app, Auracan tell you if there's motion in your house, and how much, though not necessarilywhat is producing the motion, or where. (It can tell you who, but only if you register their phone with the device.)

Inside Aura is a custom-designed wireless chip that the company also uses in its enterprise products. (Matthew Braga/CBC News)

On the main floor of Cognitive Systems'concrete-walled office is the test home, a cross between anIKEA showroom and cable-access television studio. There are grids of gaffer tape on the floor and measurement devices on tripods juxtaposed with a picture-perfect model dining room and other common living spaces.

Every object, living and inanimate,has a different signature a different way of affecting radio frequencies and the goal is to recognize as many variables as possible. Manku and Hind laugh when I ask if they've ever crawled around on the space on their hands and knees, pretending to be a dog or cat.

They admit they have without success.

"It's very hard to look like a cat,"Mankusays.

A range of motion

Aurais unlike most home security products that people are familiar with, and its first challengewillbe proving it can detect and classify different types of motion reliably.

Some types of motion inorganic movement produced by fans and blowing curtains the system is able to eliminate completely. Others, such as pets, register as small blips for now, but the company is working to eliminate pet motion, too.

Visualizing the data collected by Aura is also a challenge, and one the company is still experimenting with. For now, they've settled on a side-scrolling chart that represents motion or events of varying types as solid bars.

"So, in a minute span, how much motion was detected in that minute? The more motion detected, the higher the bar," Manku explains.

Motion is represented by a sort of side-scrolling bar graph. "The more motion detected, the higher the bar," says Taj Manku, the company's chief business development officer. (Matthew Braga/CBC News)

Human motion is easiest to spot: multiple tall bars that show lots of motion over a span of multiple minutes. It can also identify who is in the house, based on the location of your phone, and can automatically arm the system when you leave.

If the system is armedand Aura detects motion it doesn't recognize, it will send you an alertand can even sound an alarm.

Shyam Gollakota, a researcher at the University of Washington, hasn't tried Aura's product and can't vouch for its accuracy, but has worked on techniques to detect motion and gestures using wireless spectrum in the past.

"If it's motion, we know with a very high reliability how to do it using WiFi signals," he says.

Cognitive Systems is based in the Waterloo, Ont. office of Quantum Valley Investments, which was created by BlackBerry founders Mike Lazaridis and Doug Fregin. (Matthew Braga/CBC News)

Of course, there's a difference between life and the lab, andit's too early to say how reliably Aura can perform (the first pre-order units only shipped at the end of April).The company says it can filter movement detected outside the house, for example, butcouldn't provide statistics on false alarms.

"With any new technology, you have to prove it's going to work," says TomKerber, an analyst at Parks & Associates, who studies the home security market."And work reliably in all types of different architectures and layouts of homes."

'Everybody wants something different'

At Aura's core is a tiny, custom-designed chip a relatively new type of technology called cognitive radio.

The radio chip in your phone, for example, is designed to work at a very specific set of frequencies. But a cognitive radio can pick up a wide range of wireless signals Aura's goes from 680 MHz all the way to 4 Ghz, which includes most of the common frequencies in use today. And it can process those frequencies on the same chip that receives them, which Cognitive Systemssays allows it to perform its analysis much faster than using separate chips for each task.

The chip is versatile enough that the team also uses it in a separate outdoor product aimed at governments and telecommunications companies who want to be able to analyze the types of spectrum being used in a particular area and whether it's being used properly.

Spectrum is a limited resource in high demand, and grows more congested with each year, and Cognitive Systems thinks its chip can help telecom companies use spectrum in more efficient ways. So while Aura is a home security device, it may also offer a glimpse of wireless networks to come.

Aura uses a relatively new type of technology called cognitive radio, which combines a radio antenna and processor into one chip. (Matthew Braga/CBC News)

A single system can support a house that's about 2,000 square feet in size, and retails on the company's website for $499 US. The company expects most of its sales will come through partners, where it will be offered alongside more traditional home security cameras and tools.

Kozak atIHS Markitis skeptical of Aura's high price compared to other products, and isn't totally convincedthat consumers are clamouring for a privacy-conscious home security device that can watch over a bedroom. (Not to mention, there are still privacy concerns when dealing with metadata, which is what Aura tracks).

But for people who don't want to install lots of sensors inside their house, he thinks it's possible Aura could carve out a niche.

"Everybody wants something different," says Kozak. "There's not a single killer use case that dominates the market."