English

Secure Pick Up: Implicit Authentication When You Start Using the Smartphone

Cryptography and Security 2017-08-31 v1

Abstract

We propose Secure Pick Up (SPU), a convenient, lightweight, in-device, non-intrusive and automatic-learning system for smartphone user authentication. Operating in the background, our system implicitly observes users' phone pick-up movements, the way they bend their arms when they pick up a smartphone to interact with the device, to authenticate the users. Our SPU outperforms the state-of-the-art implicit authentication mechanisms in three main aspects: 1) SPU automatically learns the user's behavioral pattern without requiring a large amount of training data (especially those of other users) as previous methods did, making it more deployable. Towards this end, we propose a weighted multi-dimensional Dynamic Time Warping (DTW) algorithm to effectively quantify similarities between users' pick-up movements; 2) SPU does not rely on a remote server for providing further computational power, making SPU efficient and usable even without network access; and 3) our system can adaptively update a user's authentication model to accommodate user's behavioral drift over time with negligible overhead. Through extensive experiments on real world datasets, we demonstrate that SPU can achieve authentication accuracy up to 96.3% with a very low latency of 2.4 milliseconds. It reduces the number of times a user has to do explicit authentication by 32.9%, while effectively defending against various attacks.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1708.09366,
  title  = {Secure Pick Up: Implicit Authentication When You Start Using the Smartphone},
  author = {Wei-Han Lee and Xiaochen Liu and Yilin Shen and Hongxia Jin and Ruby B. Lee},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1708.09366},
  year   = {2017}
}

Comments

Published on ACM Symposium on Access Control Models and Technologies (SACMAT) 2017

R2 v1 2026-06-22T21:28:10.565Z