Alex D Leow

2papers

2 Papers

SPMay 22, 2019
EEG Classification by factoring in Sensor Configuration

Lubna Shibly Mokatren, Rashid Ansari, Ahmet Enis Cetin et al.

Electroencephalography (EEG) serves as an effective diagnostic tool for mental disorders and neurological abnormalities. Enhanced analysis and classification of EEG signals can help improve detection performance. A new approach is examined here for enhancing EEG classification performance by leveraging knowledge of spatial layout of EEG sensors. Performance of two classification models - model 1 that ignores the sensor layout and model 2 that factors it in - is investigated and found to achieve consistently higher detection accuracy. The analysis is based on the information content of these signals represented in two different ways: concatenation of the channels of the frequency bands and an image-like 2D representation of the EEG channel locations. Performance of these models is examined on two tasks, social anxiety disorder (SAD) detection, and emotion recognition using a dataset for emotion analysis using physiological signals (DEAP). We hypothesized that model 2 will significantly outperform model 1 and this was validated in our results as model 2 yielded $5$--$8\%$ higher accuracy in all machine learning algorithms investigated. Convolutional Neural Networks (CNN) provided the best performance far exceeding that of Support Vector Machine (SVM) and k-Nearest Neighbors (kNNs) algorithms.

CRNov 7, 2017
Sequential Keystroke Behavioral Biometrics for Mobile User Identification via Multi-view Deep Learning

Lichao Sun, Yuqi Wang, Bokai Cao et al.

With the rapid growth in smartphone usage, more organizations begin to focus on providing better services for mobile users. User identification can help these organizations to identify their customers and then cater services that have been customized for them. Currently, the use of cookies is the most common form to identify users. However, cookies are not easily transportable (e.g., when a user uses a different login account, cookies do not follow the user). This limitation motivates the need to use behavior biometric for user identification. In this paper, we propose DEEPSERVICE, a new technique that can identify mobile users based on user's keystroke information captured by a special keyboard or web browser. Our evaluation results indicate that DEEPSERVICE is highly accurate in identifying mobile users (over 93% accuracy). The technique is also efficient and only takes less than 1 ms to perform identification.