Most existing voice-based user authentication systems mainly rely on microphones to capture the unique vocal characteristics of an individual, which are vulnerable to various acoustic attacks and may suffer high-security risks. In this work, we present Accuth^++, a novel authentication system on the wrist-worn device that takes advantage of a low-cost accelerometer to verify the user's identity and resist spoofing acoustic attacks. Accuth^++ captures unique sound vibrations during the human pronunciation process and extracts multi-level features to verify the user's identity. Specifically, we analyze and model the differences between the physical sound field of human beings and loudspeakers, and extract a novel sound-field-level liveness feature to defend against spoofing attacks. Accuth^++ is an effective complement to existing wearable authentication approaches as it only leverages a ubiquitous, low-cost, and small-size accelerometer. In real-world experiments. Accuth^++ achieves over 92. 85% averaged identification accuracy among 15 human participants and an averaged equal error rate (EER) of 1. 91% for spoofing attack detection.
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Feiyu Han
Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology
Panlong Yang
Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology
Haohua Du
Beihang University
IEEE Transactions on Mobile Computing
University of Science and Technology of China
Beihang University
Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology
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Han et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d95be800ab073a278363a7 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1109/tmc.2023.3314837