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User authentication on earable devices via bone-conducted occlusion sounds

Abstract

With the rapid development of mobile devices and the fast increase of sensitive data, secure and convenient mobile authentication technologies are desired. Except for traditional passwords, many mobile devices have biometric-based authentication methods (e.g., fingerprint, voiceprint, and face recognition), but they are vulnerable to spoofing attacks. To solve this problem, we study new biometric features which are based on the dental occlusion and find that the bone-conducted sound of dental occlusion collected in binaural canals contains unique features of individual bones and teeth. Motivated by this, we propose a novel authentication system, TeethPass+, which uses earbuds to collect occlusal sounds in binaural canals to achieve authentication. First, we design an event detection method based on spectrum variance to detect bone-conducted sounds. Then, we analyze the time-frequency domain of the sounds to filter out motion noises and extract unique features of users from four aspects: teeth structure, bone structure, occlusal location, and occlusal sound. Finally, we train a Triplet network to construct the user template, which is used to complete authentication. Through extensive experiments including 53 volunteers, the performance of TeethPass+ in different environments is verified. TeethPass+ achieves an accuracy of 98.6% and resists 99.7% of spoofing attacks.

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@article{xie2025_2504.00435,
  title={ User authentication on earable devices via bone-conducted occlusion sounds },
  author={ Yadong Xie and Fan Li and Yue Wu and Yu Wang },
  journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2504.00435},
  year={ 2025 }
}
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