Abstract

Research on brain biometrics using electroencephalographic (EEG) signals has received increasing attentions in recent years. In particular, it has been recognized that the brain functional connectivity reflects individual variability. However, many questions need to be answered before we can properly use distinctive characteristics of brain connectivity for biometric applications. This paper proposes a graph-based method for EEG biometric identification. It consists of a network estimation module to generate brain connectivity networks and a graph analysis module to generate topological features based on brain networks. Specifically, we investigate seven different connectivity metrics for the network estimation module, each of which is characterized by a certain signal interaction mechanism, defining a peculiar subjective brain network. A new connectivity metric is proposed based on the algorithmic complexity of EEG signals from a information-theoretic perspective. Meanwhile, six nodal features and six global features are proposed and studied for the graph analysis module. A comprehensive evaluation is carried out to assess the impact of different connectivity metrics, graph features, and EEG frequency bands on biometric identification performance. The results demonstrate that the graph-based method proposed in this study is effective in improving the recognition rate and inter-state stability of EEG-based biometric identification systems. Our findings about the network patterns and graph features bring a further understanding of distinctiveness of humans’ EEG functional connectivity and provide useful guidance for the design of graph-based EEG biometric systems.

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