Truth in the Blood: LSU Vein-Matching Scanner Boosts Identity Security

By Ted Griggs

March 20, 2026

Biometric identity verification is widespread, but most methods are neither entirely secure nor secret. People leave fingerprints everywhere. It's easy to find high-resolution photos of a person's face or eyes on social media. In the last decade, millions of biometric records have been permanently breached because, unlike a compromised password, there's no changing your biometrics.

However, LSU has created a biometric authentication system that is as accurate as retinal or fingerprint scans and more secure.

Mockup of plethysmography device

A lab mockup of the photoplethysmography device using off-the-shelf components. The commercial version of the technology would be built into a smartwatch's software.

The system uses a machine learning algorithm and photoplethysmography (PPG), the same technology that allows smartwatches to track heart rate. By shining an infrared light on a person鈥檚 finger or wrist, PPG can track changes in blood flow.

鈥淓veryone鈥檚 blood flow patterns are unique. They are also more difficult to fake than retinal scans or fingerprints,鈥 said LSU Electrical Engineering Professor Hsiao-Chun Wu. 鈥淚n addition, PPG signals are easy and inexpensive to capture.鈥

Wu and co-inventors Limeng Pu and Jin-Woo Choi, former LSU faculty members, successfully tested their invention in the lab with a wearable prototype they made for less than $50.

Their goal is to license the invention to a smartwatch maker like Apple or Samsung. Those firms could easily add the LSU algorithm to a microchip, Wu said. The technology could also secure smartphones, laptops, buildings and laboratories.

License this invention

LSU, through its Office of Innovation & Technology Commercialization (ITC), is seeking partners to help bring the discovery to market. For licensing inquiries, contact techlicensing@lsu.edu 

The U.S. biometric authentication market had an estimated value of $7 billion to $15 billion in 2025. Some forecasts show the market could reach $60 billion in 10 years.

The LSU system offers another advantage. It can continuously track users in real time and share that data online. For example, the system could tell if an unauthorized person uses a worker鈥檚 laptop.

Wu said the system can also be used in hospitals to prevent patients in memory care, pediatric and mental health wards from wandering into dangerous areas.

鈥淭his is a remarkable breakthrough and shows how 星空无限传媒 working to address real-world security challenges,鈥 said Robert Twilley, vice chancellor of research and economic development 星空无限传媒. 鈥淥ur researchers are driving innovation that helps society while boosting economic development.鈥

Wu and the research team worked with the LSU Office of Innovation & Technology Commercialization (ITC) to protect their discovery.

鈥淲e are eager to help our faculty members pursue commercialization avenues for their discoveries,鈥 said Daniel Felch, ITC senior commercialization officer.