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Creators/Authors contains: "Jin, Richard"

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  1. C-Auth is a novel authentication method for smart glasses that explores the feasibility of authenticating users using the facial contour lines from the nose and cheeks captured by a down-facing camera in the middle of the glasses. To evaluate the system, we conducted a user study with 20 participants in three sessions on different days. Our system correctly authenticates the target participant versus the other 19 participants (attackers) with a true positive rate of 98.0% (SD: 2.96%) and a false positive rate of 4.97% (2.88 %) across all three days. We conclude by discussing current limitations, challenges, and potential future applications for C-Auth. 
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  2. We present HPSpeech, a silent speech interface for commodity headphones. HPSpeech utilizes the existing speakers of the headphones to emit inaudible acoustic signals. The movements of the temporomandibular joint (TMJ) during speech modify the reflection pattern of these signals, which are captured by a microphone positioned inside the headphones. To evaluate the performance of HPSpeech, we tested it on two headphones with a total of 18 participants. The results demonstrated that HPSpeech successfully recognized 8 popular silent speech commands for controlling the music player with an accuracy over 90%. While our tests use modified commodity hardware (both with and without active noise cancellation), our results show that sensing the movement of the TMJ could be as simple as a firmware update for ANC headsets which already include a microphone inside the hear cup. This leaves us to believe that this technique has great potential for rapid deployment in the near future. We further discuss the challenges that need to be addressed before deploying HPSpeech at scale. 
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  3. In this paper, we introduce PoseSonic, an intelligent acoustic sensing solution for smartglasses that estimates upper body poses. Our system only requires two pairs of microphones and speakers on the hinges of the eyeglasses to emit FMCW-encoded inaudible acoustic signals and receive reflected signals for body pose estimation. Using a customized deep learning model, PoseSonic estimates the 3D positions of 9 body joints including the shoulders, elbows, wrists, hips, and nose. We adopt a cross-modal supervision strategy to train our model using synchronized RGB video frames as ground truth. We conducted in-lab and semi-in-the-wild user studies with 22 participants to evaluate PoseSonic, and our user-independent model achieved a mean per joint position error of 6.17 cm in the lab setting and 14.12 cm in semi-in-the-wild setting when predicting the 9 body joint positions in 3D. Our further studies show that the performance was not significantly impacted by different surroundings or when the devices were remounted or by real-world environmental noise. Finally, we discuss the opportunities, challenges, and limitations of deploying PoseSonic in real-world applications. 
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