6,457 research outputs found
Privacy-Preserving Facial Recognition Using Biometric-Capsules
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)In recent years, developers have used the proliferation of biometric sensors in smart devices, along with recent advances in deep learning, to implement an array of biometrics-based recognition systems. Though these systems demonstrate remarkable performance and have seen wide acceptance, they present unique and pressing security and privacy concerns. One proposed method which addresses these concerns is the elegant, fusion-based Biometric-Capsule (BC) scheme. The BC scheme is provably secure, privacy-preserving, cancellable and interoperable in its secure feature fusion design.
In this work, we demonstrate that the BC scheme is uniquely fit to secure state-of-the-art facial verification, authentication and identification systems. We compare the performance of unsecured, underlying biometrics systems to the performance of the BC-embedded systems in order to directly demonstrate the minimal effects of the privacy-preserving BC scheme on underlying system performance. Notably, we demonstrate that, when seamlessly embedded into a state-of-the-art FaceNet and ArcFace verification systems which achieve accuracies of 97.18% and 99.75% on the benchmark LFW dataset, the BC-embedded systems are able to achieve accuracies of 95.13% and 99.13% respectively. Furthermore, we also demonstrate that the BC scheme outperforms or performs as well as several other proposed secure biometric methods
Biometric Authentication System on Mobile Personal Devices
We propose a secure, robust, and low-cost biometric authentication system on the mobile personal device for the personal network. The system consists of the following five key modules: 1) face detection; 2) face registration; 3) illumination normalization; 4) face verification; and 5) information fusion. For the complicated face authentication task on the devices with limited resources, the emphasis is largely on the reliability and applicability of the system. Both theoretical and practical considerations are taken. The final system is able to achieve an equal error rate of 2% under challenging testing protocols. The low hardware and software cost makes the system well adaptable to a large range of security applications
Touchalytics: On the Applicability of Touchscreen Input as a Behavioral Biometric for Continuous Authentication
We investigate whether a classifier can continuously authenticate users based
on the way they interact with the touchscreen of a smart phone. We propose a
set of 30 behavioral touch features that can be extracted from raw touchscreen
logs and demonstrate that different users populate distinct subspaces of this
feature space. In a systematic experiment designed to test how this behavioral
pattern exhibits consistency over time, we collected touch data from users
interacting with a smart phone using basic navigation maneuvers, i.e., up-down
and left-right scrolling. We propose a classification framework that learns the
touch behavior of a user during an enrollment phase and is able to accept or
reject the current user by monitoring interaction with the touch screen. The
classifier achieves a median equal error rate of 0% for intra-session
authentication, 2%-3% for inter-session authentication and below 4% when the
authentication test was carried out one week after the enrollment phase. While
our experimental findings disqualify this method as a standalone authentication
mechanism for long-term authentication, it could be implemented as a means to
extend screen-lock time or as a part of a multi-modal biometric authentication
system.Comment: to appear at IEEE Transactions on Information Forensics & Security;
Download data from http://www.mariofrank.net/touchalytics
In-ear EEG biometrics for feasible and readily collectable real-world person authentication
The use of EEG as a biometrics modality has been investigated for about a
decade, however its feasibility in real-world applications is not yet
conclusively established, mainly due to the issues with collectability and
reproducibility. To this end, we propose a readily deployable EEG biometrics
system based on a `one-fits-all' viscoelastic generic in-ear EEG sensor
(collectability), which does not require skilled assistance or cumbersome
preparation. Unlike most existing studies, we consider data recorded over
multiple recording days and for multiple subjects (reproducibility) while, for
rigour, the training and test segments are not taken from the same recording
days. A robust approach is considered based on the resting state with eyes
closed paradigm, the use of both parametric (autoregressive model) and
non-parametric (spectral) features, and supported by simple and fast cosine
distance, linear discriminant analysis and support vector machine classifiers.
Both the verification and identification forensics scenarios are considered and
the achieved results are on par with the studies based on impractical on-scalp
recordings. Comprehensive analysis over a number of subjects, setups, and
analysis features demonstrates the feasibility of the proposed ear-EEG
biometrics, and its potential in resolving the critical collectability,
robustness, and reproducibility issues associated with current EEG biometrics
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