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Biometrics: accessibility challenge or opportunity?

Biometrics: accessibility challenge or opportunity?
Biometrics: accessibility challenge or opportunity?
Biometric recognition is currently implemented in several authentication contexts, most recently in mobile devices where it is expected to complement or even replace traditional authentication modalities such as PIN (Personal Identification Number) or passwords. The assumed convenience characteristics of biometrics are transparency, reliability and ease of use, however, the question of whether biometric recognition is as intuitive and straightforward to use is open to debate. Can biometric systems make some tasks easier for people with accessibility concerns? To investigate this question, an accessibility evaluation of a mobile app was conducted where test subjects withdraw money from a fictitious ATM (Automated Teller Machine) scenario. The biometric authentication mechanisms used include face, voice, and fingerprint. Furthermore, we employed traditional modalities of PIN and pattern in order to check if biometric recognition is indeed a real improvement. The trial test subjects within this work were people with real-life accessibility concerns. A group of people without accessibility concerns also participated, providing a baseline performance. Experimental results are presented concerning performance, HCI (Human-Computer Interaction) and accessibility, grouped according to category of accessibility concern. Our results reveal links between individual modalities and user category establishing guidelines for future accessible biometric products.
biometrics, face recognition, dactyloscopy, disabilities, cell phones, apps, consumer electronics, elderly
Blanco-Gonzalo, Ramon
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Lunerti, Chiara
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Reillo, Raul Sanchez-
ca38245f-262c-4e86-8ee9-c7521e021db7
Guest, Richard Michael
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Blanco-Gonzalo, Ramon
d41d04ec-86ac-4147-ac7d-d202a9331025
Lunerti, Chiara
12ff8320-25c9-4499-9773-d5f629d87d21
Reillo, Raul Sanchez-
ca38245f-262c-4e86-8ee9-c7521e021db7
Guest, Richard Michael
93533dbd-b101-491b-83cc-39ccfdc18165

Blanco-Gonzalo, Ramon, Lunerti, Chiara, Reillo, Raul Sanchez- and Guest, Richard Michael (2018) Biometrics: accessibility challenge or opportunity? PlosOne, 13 (3). (doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0194111).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Biometric recognition is currently implemented in several authentication contexts, most recently in mobile devices where it is expected to complement or even replace traditional authentication modalities such as PIN (Personal Identification Number) or passwords. The assumed convenience characteristics of biometrics are transparency, reliability and ease of use, however, the question of whether biometric recognition is as intuitive and straightforward to use is open to debate. Can biometric systems make some tasks easier for people with accessibility concerns? To investigate this question, an accessibility evaluation of a mobile app was conducted where test subjects withdraw money from a fictitious ATM (Automated Teller Machine) scenario. The biometric authentication mechanisms used include face, voice, and fingerprint. Furthermore, we employed traditional modalities of PIN and pattern in order to check if biometric recognition is indeed a real improvement. The trial test subjects within this work were people with real-life accessibility concerns. A group of people without accessibility concerns also participated, providing a baseline performance. Experimental results are presented concerning performance, HCI (Human-Computer Interaction) and accessibility, grouped according to category of accessibility concern. Our results reveal links between individual modalities and user category establishing guidelines for future accessible biometric products.

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Accepted/In Press date: 23 February 2018
Published date: 22 March 2018
Additional Information: There is a correction to this research output at: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0196372
Keywords: biometrics, face recognition, dactyloscopy, disabilities, cell phones, apps, consumer electronics, elderly

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 489613
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/489613
PURE UUID: 949f7960-1144-4eb0-98df-4048b1305cd0
ORCID for Richard Michael Guest: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7535-7336

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Date deposited: 29 Apr 2024 16:46
Last modified: 30 Apr 2024 02:05

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Contributors

Author: Ramon Blanco-Gonzalo
Author: Chiara Lunerti
Author: Raul Sanchez- Reillo
Author: Richard Michael Guest ORCID iD

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