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Towards an Accurate ECG Biometric Authentication System with Low Acquisition Time

Biometrics is the study of physical or behavioral traits that establishes the identity of a person. Forensics, physical security and cyber security are some of the main fields that use biometrics. Unlike traditional authentication systems—such as password based—biometrics cannot be lost, forgotten or shared. This is possible because biometrics establishes the identity of a person based on a physiological/behavioural characteristic rather than what the person possess or remembers. Biometrics has two modes of operation: identification and authentication. Identification finds the identity of a person among a group of persons. Authentication determines if the claimed identity of a person is truthful.
Biometric person authentication is an alternative to passwords or graphical patterns. It prevents shoulder surfing attacks, i.e., people watching from a short distance. Nevertheless, biometric traits of conventional authentication techniques like fingerprints, face—and to some extend iris—are easy to capture and duplicate. This denotes a security risk for modern and future applications such as digital twins, where an attacker can copy and duplicate a biometric trait in order to spoof a biometric system. Researchers have proposed ECG as biometric authentication to solve this problem. ECG authentication conceals the biometric traits and reduces the risk of an attack by duplication of the biometric trait. However, current ECG authentication solutions require 10 or more seconds of an ECG signal in order to have accurate results. The accuracy is directly proportional to the ECG signal time-length for authentication. This is inconvenient to implement ECG authentication in an end-user product because a user cannot wait 10 or more seconds to gain access in a secure manner to their device.
This thesis addresses the problem of spoofing by proposing an accurate and secure ECG biometric authentication system with relatively short ECG signal length for authentication. The system consists of an ECG acquisition from lead I (two electrodes), signal processing approaches for filtration and R-peak detection, a feature extractor and an authentication process. To evaluate this system, we developed a method to calculate the Equal Error Rate—EER—with non-normal distributed data.
In the authentication process, we propose an approach based on Support Vector Machine—SVM—and achieve 4.5% EER with 4 seconds of ECG signal length for authentication. This approach opens the door for a deeper understanding of the signal and hence we enhanced it by applying a hybrid approach of Convolutional Neural Networks—CNN—combined with SVM. The purpose of this hybrid approach is to improve accuracy by automatically detect and extract features with Deep Learning—in this case CNN—and then take the output into a one-class SVM classifier—Authentication; which proved to outperform accuracy for one-class ECG classification. This hybrid approach reduces the EER to 2.84% with 4 seconds of ECG signal length for authentication.
Furthermore, we investigated the combination of two different biometrics techniques and we improved the accuracy to 0.46% EER, while maintaining a short ECG signal length for authentication of 4 seconds. We fuse Fingerprint with ECG at the decision level. Decision level fusion requires information that is available from any biometric technique. Fusion at different levels—such as feature level fusion—requires information about features that are incompatible or hidden. Fingerprint minutiae are composed of information that differs from ECG peaks and valleys. Therefore fusion at the feature level is not possible unless the fusion algorithm provides a compatible conversion scheme. Proprietary biometric hardware does not provide information about the features or the algorithms; therefore, features are hidden and not accessible for feature level fusion; however, the result is always available for a decision level fusion.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:uottawa.ca/oai:ruor.uottawa.ca:10393/40129
Date31 January 2020
CreatorsArteaga Falconi, Juan Sebastian
ContributorsEl Saddik, Abdulmotaleb
PublisherUniversité d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
Source SetsUniversité d’Ottawa
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Formatapplication/pdf

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