Exploiting the P300 paradigm for cognitive biometrics
Author(s) -
Cota Navin Gupta,
Ramaswamy Palaniappan,
Raveendran Paramesran
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
international journal of cognitive biometrics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2042-647X
pISSN - 2042-6461
DOI - 10.1504/ijcb.2012.046513
Subject(s) - biometrics , cognition , computer science , psychology , cognitive psychology , speech recognition , computer security , neuroscience
Automatic identification of a person’s individuality is an important issue today. Brain Computer Interfaces (BCI) which uses EEG as a modality is a promising area for cognitive biometrics. A BCI system could be used to recognise a sequence (say letters, colours or images) by the user. This sequence could form a ‘BrainWord’, which could be used for authentication in a multimodal environment with other technologies for high security applications. In this work, we studied several variations of the well-known P300 BCI paradigm. The influence of irrelevant stimuli during a task was studied by considering the popular Rapid Serial Visual Paradigm (RSVP) . The variation in spatial locations of the presentation stimuli during a task was studied, by designing a Spatially Varying Paradigm . Comparison of classification accuracies and bit rates for eight participants from a BCI perspective, highlights that RSVP paradigm could be exploited effectively for biometrics.
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