Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Gary M. Weiss & Jeffrey W. Lockhart Fordham University {gweiss,lockhart}@cis.fordham.edu Biometrics concerns unique identification based on physical or behavioral traits Hard biometrics relies on uniquely identifying traits ▪ Fingerprints, DNA, iris, etc. Soft biometric traits are not distinctive enough for unique identification, but may help ▪ Physical traits: Sex, age, height, weight, etc. ▪ Behavioral traits: gait, clothes, travel patterns, etc. 8/21/2011 Gary M. Weiss SensorKDD 2011 2 In earlier work1 we showed that for 36 users we were able to identify the correct user using only accelerometer data: With a single 10 second walking sample: 84% - 91% With a 5-10 minute walking sample: 100% So if we can identify a user based on their movements, maybe we can identify user traits 1 Jennifer R. Kwapisz, Gary M. Weiss and Samuel A. Moore. Cell Phone-Based Biometric Identification, Proceedings of the IEEE Fourth International Conference on Biometrics: Theory, Applications and Systems (BTAS-10), Washington DC. 8/21/2011 Gary M. Weiss SensorKDD 2011 3 To help identify a person (soft biometrics) But do we have better uses for these “soft” traits than for identification? As data miners, of course we do! We want to know everything we possibly can about a person. Somehow we will exploit this. 8/21/2011 Gary M. Weiss SensorKDD 2011 4 Normally think about traits as being: Unchanging: race, skin color, eye color, etc. Slow changing: Height, weight, etc. But want to know everything about a person: What they wear, how they feel, if they are tired, etc. Our goal is to predict these too We have not seen this goal stated in context of mobile sensor data mining. 8/21/2011 Gary M. Weiss SensorKDD 2011 5 Very little explicit work on this topic Some work related to biometrics but incidental ▪ Work on gait recognition mentions factors that influence recognition, like weight of footwear & sex Other communities work in related areas Ergonomics & kinesiology study factors that impact gait ▪ Texture of footwear, type of shoe, sex, age, heel height 8/21/2011 Gary M. Weiss SensorKDD 2011 6 Data collected from ~70 people Accelerometer data while walking Survey data includes anything we could think of that might somehow be predictable: ▪ ▪ ▪ ▪ Sex, height, weight, age, race, handedness, disability Type of area grew up in {rural, suburban, urban} Shoe size, footwear type, size of heels, type of clothing # hours academic work , # hours exercise Too few subjects investigate all factors ▪ Many were not predictable (maybe with more data) 8/21/2011 Gary M. Weiss SensorKDD 2011 7 Accuracy Male Female 71.2% Male 31 7 Female 12 16 Accuracy Short 83.3% Short 15 Tall 2 Tall 5 20 Accuracy 78.9% Light Heavy Light Heavy 13 2 7 17 Results for IB3 classifier. For height and weight middle categories removed. 8/21/2011 Gary M. Weiss SensorKDD 2011 8 8/21/2011 Gary M. Weiss SensorKDD 2011 9 A wide open area for data mining research A marketers dream Clear privacy issues Room for creativity & insight for finding traits Probably many interesting commercial and research applications Imagine diagnosing back problems via your mobile phone via gait analysis … 8/21/2011 Gary M. Weiss SensorKDD 2011 10 Will collect data from hundreds of users Getting a diverse sample a bit difficult (on campus) Try to construct more useful features Evaluate the ability to predict the dozens of user traits that we track Have begun to track shoe type and heel size 8/21/2011 Gary M. Weiss SensorKDD 2011 11