Abstract:
Human body communication (HBC) is a short-range, wireless communication in the vicinity of, or inside a human body. In this paper, biometric authentication based on capac...Show MoreMetadata
Abstract:
Human body communication (HBC) is a short-range, wireless communication in the vicinity of, or inside a human body. In this paper, biometric authentication based on capacitive coupled HBC is presented for the wearable devices. In-situ experiments were conducted with 20 volunteers to investigate the feasibility. The S21 parameters of the HBC channel from one palm to the other within the frequency range of 300 KHz-50 MHz were measured. A total of 2,561,600 data are acquired. The data are analyzed by the support vector machines (SVM) including C-SVM and nu-SVM, where 2,241,400 data are used to train the SVM model and 320,200 data are used to estimate the authentication rate. Linear, polynomial, and radial basis function (RBF) are adopted as the kernel functions, respectively. In addition, to verify whether the features in low frequency band will affect the performance of HBC authentication, the features in four frequency bands, i.e., from 300 KHz to 50 MHz, from 3.4 MHz to 50 MHz, from 5.6 MHz to 50 MHz, and from 9.6 MHz to 50 MHz are used as the biometric trait, respectively. The experiment results show that, in biometric identification mode, identification rate of 98% is achieved, and in biometric verification mode, the equal error rate (EER) is 0.24%, the average area under the curve (AUC) of receiver operating characteristic (ROC) reaches 0.9993.
Published in: 2015 IEEE 12th International Conference on Wearable and Implantable Body Sensor Networks (BSN)
Date of Conference: 09-12 June 2015
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 19 October 2015
Electronic ISBN:978-1-4673-7201-5