AUToSen: Deep-Learning-Based Implicit Continuous Authentication Using Smartphone Sensors

Smartphones have become crucial for our daily life activities and are increasingly loaded with our personal information to perform several sensitive tasks, including, mobile banking and communication, and are used for storing private photos and files. Therefore, there is a high demand for applying u...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE internet of things journal 2020-06, Vol.7 (6), p.5008-5020
Hauptverfasser: Abuhamad, Mohammed, Abuhmed, Tamer, Mohaisen, David, Nyang, DaeHun
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Smartphones have become crucial for our daily life activities and are increasingly loaded with our personal information to perform several sensitive tasks, including, mobile banking and communication, and are used for storing private photos and files. Therefore, there is a high demand for applying usable authentication techniques that prevent unauthorized access to sensitive information. In this article, we propose AUTo Sen , a deep-learning-based active authentication approach that exploits sensors in consumer-grade smartphones to authenticate a user. Unlike conventional approaches, AUTo Sen is based on deep learning to identify user distinct behavior from the embedded sensors with and without the user's interaction with the smartphone. We investigate different deep learning architectures in modeling and capturing users' behavioral patterns for the purpose of authentication. Moreover, we explore the sufficiency of sensory data required to accurately authenticate users. We evaluate AUTo Sen on a real-world data set that includes sensors data of 84 participants' smartphones collected using our designed data-collection application. The experiments show that AUTo Sen operates accurately using readings of only three sensors (accelerometer, gyroscope, and magnetometer) with a high authentication frequency, e.g., one authentication attempt every 0.5 s. Using sensory data of one second enables an authentication F1-score of approximately 98%, false acceptance rate (FAR) of 0.95%, false rejection rate (FRR) of 6.67%, and equal error rate (EER) of 0.41%. While using sensory data of half a second enables an authentication F1-score of 97.52%, FAR of 0.96%, FRR of 8.08%, and EER of 0.09%. Moreover, we investigate the effects of using different sensory data at variable sampling periods on the performance of the authentication models under various settings and learning architectures.
ISSN:2327-4662
2327-4662
DOI:10.1109/JIOT.2020.2975779