Publication | Closed Access
Whose move is it anyway? Authenticating smart wearable devices using unique head movement patterns
110
Citations
35
References
2016
Year
Unknown Venue
Wearable SystemMobile SecurityEngineeringMobile InteractionInformation SecurityBiometricsWearable TechnologyWearable ComputerUnique Head-movement PatternsWhose MoveKinesiologyPervasive ComputingSmart Wearable DevicesAuthentication ProtocolGoogle GlassHealth SciencesLightweight Authentication MechanismAssistive TechnologyIdentity-based SecurityMobile ComputingComputer ScienceData SecurityCryptographyUser Authentication SystemMobile SensingEye TrackingHuman-computer InteractionHuman MovementTechnologyAuthentication Access Control
In this paper, we present the design, implementation and evaluation of a user authentication system, Headbanger, for smart head-worn devices, through monitoring the user's unique head-movement patterns in response to an external audio stimulus. Compared to today's solutions, which primarily rely on indirect authentication mechanisms via the user's smartphone, thus cumbersome and susceptible to adversary intrusions, the proposed head-movement based authentication provides an accurate, robust, light-weight and convenient solution. Through extensive experimental evaluation with 95 participants, we show that our mechanism can accurately authenticate users with an average true acceptance rate of 95.57% while keeping the average false acceptance rate of 4.43%. We also show that even simple head-movement patterns are robust against imitation attacks. Finally, we demonstrate our authentication algorithm is rather light-weight: the overall processing latency on Google Glass is around 1.9 seconds.
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