Researchers from Rutgers University in the US have performed the first study of free-form gesture passwords for smartphones in the field.
Free-form gesture passwords allow people to draw a password of any shape with any number of fingers, researchers said.
The results, combined with previous studies, show that free-form gesture passwords are a serious alternative to text or other log-in methods, especially for mobile devices, they said.
Free-form gesture passwords are very suitable for touchscreens, faster to use, easy to remember and hard to guess.
"Getting access to somebody's phone can give a lot of information about that person and make them vulnerable to lots of different kinds of attacks than can have financial and other repercussions," said Lindqvist.
Previous work by other researchers found that text passwords and PINs were hard to use, easy to compromise and unsuitable for mobile devices. Their shortcomings include limited password space, susceptibility to "shoulder surfing" and slow entry, Lindqvist said.
Each participant was asked to create and recall passwords for two different sets of accounts created for the study. The first set contained two virtual accounts - online banking and social network. The second set included six accounts - email, online gaming, online dating, shopping, online course and music streaming.
The results showed that the participants preferred shapes (49.28 per cent) and letters (24.07 per cent) for their gesture passwords versus lines (15.76 per cent).
Participants who used gesture passwords spent 22 per cent less time logging in and 42 per cent less time creating passwords, on average.
Free-form gestures could be expanded to laptops and tablet/laptop combos with touch screens - even doors with touch screens instead of key locks or swipe cards. They also could expanded to access to services over the internet, researchers said.
The findings will be presented at the Association for Computing Machinery's Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems in May.
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