Recently, electroencephalography (EEG) is considered as a new potential type of user authentication with many security advantages of being difficult to fake, impossible to observe or intercept, unique, and alive person recording require. The difficulty is that EEG signals are very weak and subject to the contamination from many artifact signals. However, for the applications in human health, true EEG signals, without the contamination, is highly desirable, but for the purposes of authentication, where stable and repeatable patterns from the source signals are critical, the origins of the signals are of less concern. In this paper, we propose an EEG-based authentication method, which is simple to implement and easy to use, by taking the advantage of EEG artifacts, generated by a number of purposely designed voluntary facial muscle movements. These tasks can be single or combined, depending on the level of security required. Our experiment showed that using EEG artifacts for user authentication in multilevel security systems is promising.
History
Volume
299
Pagination
343-353
Location
Bilbao, Spain
Start date
2014-06-25
End date
2014-06-27
ISSN
2194-5357
ISBN-13
9783319079943
Language
eng
Publication classification
E1.1 Full written paper - refereed
Copyright notice
2014, Springer International Publishing Switzerland
Editor/Contributor(s)
de la Puerta JG, Ferreira IG, Bringas PG, Klett F, Abraham A, de Carvalho ACPLF, Herrero Á, Baruque B, Quintián H, Corchado E
Title of proceedings
SOCO’14-CISIS’14-ICEUTE’14 : Proceedings of the International Joint Conference SOCO’14-CISIS’14-ICEUTE’14
Event
Intelligent and Soft Computing. Conference (2014 : Bilbao, Spain)