Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Biometric verification with eye movements: results from a long‐term recording series

View through CrossRef
The authors present the author's results of using saccadic eye movements for biometric user verification. The method can be applied to computers or other devices, in which it is possible to include an eye movement camera system. Thus far, this idea has been little researched. As they have extensively studied eye movement signals for medical applications, they saw an opportunity for the biometric use of saccades. Saccades are the fastest of all eye movements, and are easy to stimulate and detect from signals. As signals measured from a physiological origin, the properties of eye movements (e.g. latency and maximum angular velocity) may contain considerable variability between different times of day, between days or weeks and so on. Since such variability might impair biometric verification based on saccades, they attempted to tackle this issue. In contrast to their earlier results, where they did not include such long intervals between sessions of eye movement recordings as in the present research, their results showed that – notwithstanding some variability present in saccadic variables – this variability was not considerable enough to essentially disturb or impair verification results. The only exception was a test series of very long intervals ∼16 or 32 months in length. For the best results obtained with various classification methods, false rejection and false acceptance rates were <5%. Thus, they conclude that saccadic eye movements can provide a realistic basis for biometric user verification.
Institution of Engineering and Technology (IET)
Title: Biometric verification with eye movements: results from a long‐term recording series
Description:
The authors present the author's results of using saccadic eye movements for biometric user verification.
The method can be applied to computers or other devices, in which it is possible to include an eye movement camera system.
Thus far, this idea has been little researched.
As they have extensively studied eye movement signals for medical applications, they saw an opportunity for the biometric use of saccades.
Saccades are the fastest of all eye movements, and are easy to stimulate and detect from signals.
As signals measured from a physiological origin, the properties of eye movements (e.
g.
latency and maximum angular velocity) may contain considerable variability between different times of day, between days or weeks and so on.
Since such variability might impair biometric verification based on saccades, they attempted to tackle this issue.
In contrast to their earlier results, where they did not include such long intervals between sessions of eye movement recordings as in the present research, their results showed that – notwithstanding some variability present in saccadic variables – this variability was not considerable enough to essentially disturb or impair verification results.
The only exception was a test series of very long intervals ∼16 or 32 months in length.
For the best results obtained with various classification methods, false rejection and false acceptance rates were <5%.
Thus, they conclude that saccadic eye movements can provide a realistic basis for biometric user verification.

Related Results

A KCP-DCNN-Based Two-Step Verification Multimodal Biometric Authentication System featuring QR Code Fabrication
A KCP-DCNN-Based Two-Step Verification Multimodal Biometric Authentication System featuring QR Code Fabrication
Abstract Starting with for, need change Enhanced authentication performance, the concept of multi-biometrics authentication systems has emerged as a promising solution in t...
Verification of High Speed on Chip with VIP using System Verilog
Verification of High Speed on Chip with VIP using System Verilog
Abstract - The exploration work is addressing verification of High speed on chips protocol; we've used the system Verilog grounded test bench structure. I developed a system Verilo...
A Novel Multimodal Biometric Person Authentication System Based on ECG and Iris Data
A Novel Multimodal Biometric Person Authentication System Based on ECG and Iris Data
Existing security issues like keys, pins, and passwords employed presently in almost all the fields that have certain limitations like passwords and pins can be easily forgotten; k...
The Power of the Wave: Activism Rainbow Region-Style
The Power of the Wave: Activism Rainbow Region-Style
Introduction The counterculture that arose during the 1960s and 1970s left lasting social and political reverberations in developed nations. This was a time of increasing affluenc...
Biometric Encryption: Integrating Artificial Intelligence for Robust Authentication
Biometric Encryption: Integrating Artificial Intelligence for Robust Authentication
Biometric authentication, leveraging unique physiological or behavioral traits for identity verification, has emerged as a cornerstone of contemporary security systems. However, th...
Eye movements during visuomotor adaptation represent only part of the explicit learning
Eye movements during visuomotor adaptation represent only part of the explicit learning
Abstract Visuomotor rotations are learned through a combination of explicit strategy and implicit recalibration. However, measuring the relative contribution of eac...
Eye Movements
Eye Movements
AbstractA description of eye movements is presented in this chapter. In addition, models of the saccadic system and smooth pursuit system are also presented. Five different types o...

Back to Top