HCSPDec 10, 2019

Is Your Smartband Smart Enough to Know Who You Are: Continuous Physiological Authentication in The Wild

arXiv:1912.04760v225 citations
AI Analysis

This addresses security vulnerabilities in privacy-sensitive cloud services like digital banking and smart homes, though it is incremental as it adapts existing physiological authentication methods to new wearable device constraints.

The study tackled the problem of continuous authentication for cloud and IoT services by using heart rate variability (HRV) features from wrist-worn devices, achieving performance that demonstrates HRV as a strong candidate for this purpose.

The use of cloud services that process privacy-sensitive information such as digital banking, pervasive healthcare, smart home applications requires an implicit continuous authentication solution which will make these systems less vulnerable to the spoofing attacks. Physiological signals can be used for continuous authentication due to their personal uniqueness. Ubiquitous wrist-worn wearable devices are equipped with photoplethysmogram sensors which enable to extract heart rate variability (HRV) features. In this study, we show that these devices can be used for continuous physiological authentication, for enhancing the security of the cloud, edge services, and IoT devices. A system that is suitable for the smartband framework comes with new challenges such as relatively low signal quality and artifacts due to placement which were not encountered in full lead electrocardiogram systems. After the artifact removal, cleaned physiological signals are fed to the machine learning algorithms. In order to train our machine learning models, we collected physiological data using off-the-shelf smartbands and smartwatches in a real-life event. Performance evaluation of selected machine learning algorithms shows that HRV is a strong candidate for continuous unobtrusive implicit physiological authentication.

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