DocumentCode
2209705
Title
Biosec: a biometric based approach for securing communication in wireless networks of biosensors implanted in the human body
Author
Cherukuri, Sriram ; Venkatasubramanian, Krishna K. ; Gupta, Sandeep K S
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci. & Eng., Arizona State Univ., Tempe, AZ, USA
fYear
2003
fDate
6-9 Oct. 2003
Firstpage
432
Lastpage
439
Abstract
Advances in microelectronics, material science and wireless technology have led to the development of sensors that can be used for accurate monitoring of inaccessible environments. Health monitoring, telemedicine, military and environmental monitoring are some of the applications where sensors can be used. The sensors implanted inside the human body to monitor parts of the body are called biosensors. These biosensors form a network and collectively monitor the health condition of their carrier or host. Health monitoring involves collection of data about vital body parameters from different parts of the body and making decisions based on it. This information is of personal nature and is required to be secured. Insecurity may also lead to dangerous consequences. Due to the extreme constraints of energy, memory and computation securing the communication among the biosensors is not a trivial problem. Key distribution is central to any security mechanism. In this paper we propose an approach wherein, biometrics derived from the body are used for securing the keying material. This method obviates the need for expensive computation and avoids unnecessary communication making our approach novel compared to existing approaches.
Keywords
biometrics (access control); biosensors; health care; medical diagnostic computing; patient monitoring; public key cryptography; telecommunication security; ubiquitous computing; wireless LAN; Biosec; accurate monitoring; biometric based approach; biosensors; body parameters; computation securing; decision making; energy memory; environmental monitoring; health condition monitoring; health monitoring; human body; inaccessible environments; key distribution; key management; material science; microelectronics; military; pervasive computing; securing communication; security mechanism; telemedicine; trivial problem; wireless networks; wireless technology; Biometrics; Biosensors; Communication system security; Condition monitoring; Humans; Materials science and technology; Microelectronics; Telemedicine; Wireless networks; Wireless sensor networks;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Parallel Processing Workshops, 2003. Proceedings. 2003 International Conference on
ISSN
1530-2016
Print_ISBN
0-7695-2018-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICPPW.2003.1240399
Filename
1240399
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