Title :
ECG Biometric Recognition: A Comparative Analysis
Author :
Odinaka, Ikenna ; Lai, Po-Hsiang ; Kaplan, Alan D. ; O´Sullivan, J.A. ; Sirevaag, Erik J. ; Rohrbaugh, John W.
Author_Institution :
Preston M. Green Dept. of Electr. & Syst. Eng., Washington Univ. in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USA
Abstract :
The electrocardiogram (ECG) is an emerging biometric modality that has seen about 13 years of development in peer-reviewed literature, and as such deserves a systematic review and discussion of the associated methods and findings. In this paper, we review most of the techniques that have been applied to the use of the electrocardiogram for biometric recognition. In particular, we categorize the methodologies based on the features and the classification schemes. Finally, a comparative analysis of the authentication performance of a few of the ECG biometric systems is presented, using our inhouse database. The comparative study includes the cases where training and testing data come from the same and different sessions (days). The authentication results show that most of the algorithms that have been proposed for ECG-based biometrics perform well when the training and testing data come from the same session. However, when training and testing data come from different sessions, a performance degradation occurs. Multiple training sessions were incorporated to diminish the loss in performance. That notwithstanding, only a few of the proposed ECG recognition algorithms appear to be able to support performance improvement due to multiple training sessions. Only three of these algorithms produced equal error rates (EERs) in the single digits, including an EER of 5.5% using a method proposed by us.
Keywords :
biometrics (access control); electrocardiography; feature extraction; medical signal processing; signal classification; ECG biometric recognition; EER; authentication performance; biometric modality; classification schemes; comparative analysis; electrocardiogram; equal error rates; feature schemes; multiple training sessions; performance degradation; testing data; training data; Authentication; Databases; Electrocardiography; Feature extraction; Heart beat; Training; Authentication; ECG; EKG; biometrics; classification; electrocardiogram; fusion; identification; recognition; verification;
Journal_Title :
Information Forensics and Security, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TIFS.2012.2215324