4.6 Article

Using Convolutional Neural Network and a Single Heartbeat for ECG Biometric Recognition

Journal

ENTROPY
Volume 23, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/e23060733

Keywords

biometrics; deep learning; convolutional neural network; ECG signal; continuous wavelet transformation

Funding

  1. Deanship of Scientific Research in King Saud University
  2. initiative of DSR Graduate Students Research Support (GSR)

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This paper explores the use of a short segment of an ECG signal for biometric recognition, achieving better accuracy and acceptability by enhancing entropy through a small CNN. It also investigates the impact of different segment lengths on performance. Results show that the time-frequency domain representation of a short segment of an ECG signal can improve accuracy and acceptability of this modality.
The electrocardiogram (ECG) signal has become a popular biometric modality due to characteristics that make it suitable for developing reliable authentication systems. However, the long segment of signal required for recognition is still one of the limitations of existing ECG biometric recognition methods and affects its acceptability as a biometric modality. This paper investigates how a short segment of an ECG signal can be effectively used for biometric recognition, using deep-learning techniques. A small convolutional neural network (CNN) is designed to achieve better generalization capability by entropy enhancement of a short segment of a heartbeat signal. Additionally, it investigates how various blind and feature-dependent segments with different lengths affect the performance of the recognition system. Experiments were carried out on two databases for performance evaluation that included single and multisession records. In addition, a comparison was made between the performance of the proposed classifier and four well-known CNN models: GoogLeNet, ResNet, MobileNet and EfficientNet. Using a time-frequency domain representation of a short segment of an ECG signal around the R-peak, the proposed model achieved an accuracy of 99.90% for PTB, 98.20% for the ECG-ID mixed-session, and 94.18% for ECG-ID multisession datasets. Using the preprinted ResNet, we obtained 97.28% accuracy for 0.5-second segments around the R-peaks for ECG-ID multisession datasets, outperforming existing methods. It was found that the time-frequency domain representation of a short segment of an ECG signal can be feasible for biometric recognition by achieving better accuracy and acceptability of this modality.

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