939 research outputs found
An Evaluation of Score Level Fusion Approaches for Fingerprint and Finger-vein Biometrics
Biometric systems have to address many requirements, such as large population
coverage, demographic diversity, varied deployment environment, as well as
practical aspects like performance and spoofing attacks. Traditional unimodal
biometric systems do not fully meet the aforementioned requirements making them
vulnerable and susceptible to different types of attacks. In response to that,
modern biometric systems combine multiple biometric modalities at different
fusion levels. The fused score is decisive to classify an unknown user as a
genuine or impostor. In this paper, we evaluate combinations of score
normalization and fusion techniques using two modalities (fingerprint and
finger-vein) with the goal of identifying which one achieves better improvement
rate over traditional unimodal biometric systems. The individual scores
obtained from finger-veins and fingerprints are combined at score level using
three score normalization techniques (min-max, z-score, hyperbolic tangent) and
four score fusion approaches (minimum score, maximum score, simple sum, user
weighting). The experimental results proved that the combination of hyperbolic
tangent score normalization technique with the simple sum fusion approach
achieve the best improvement rate of 99.98%.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, 3 tables, conference, NISK 201
A Survey on Ear Biometrics
Recognizing people by their ear has recently received significant attention in the literature. Several reasons account for this trend: first, ear recognition does not suffer from some problems associated with other non contact biometrics, such as face recognition; second, it is the most promising candidate for combination with the face in the context of multi-pose face recognition; and third, the ear can be used for human recognition in surveillance videos where the face may be occluded completely or in part. Further, the ear appears to degrade little with age. Even though, current ear detection and recognition systems have reached a certain level of maturity, their success is limited to controlled indoor conditions. In addition to variation in illumination, other open research problems include hair occlusion; earprint forensics; ear symmetry; ear classification; and ear individuality. This paper provides a detailed survey of research conducted in ear detection and recognition. It provides an up-to-date review of the existing literature revealing the current state-of-art for not only those who are working in this area but also for those who might exploit this new approach. Furthermore, it offers insights into some unsolved ear recognition problems as well as ear databases available for researchers
On Acquisition and Analysis of a Dataset Comprising of Gait, Ear and Semantic data
In outdoor scenarios such as surveillance where there is very little control over the environments, complex computer vision algorithms are often required for analysis. However constrained environments, such as walkways in airports where the surroundings and the path taken by individuals can be controlled, provide an ideal application for such systems. Figure 1.1 depicts an idealised constrained environment. The path taken by the subject is restricted to a narrow path and once inside is in a volume where lighting and other conditions are controlled to facilitate biometric analysis. The ability to control the surroundings and the flow of people greatly simplifes the computer vision task, compared to typical unconstrained environments. Even though biometric datasets with greater than one hundred people are increasingly common, there is still very little known about the inter and intra-subject variation in many biometrics. This information is essential to estimate the recognition capability and limits of automatic recognition systems. In order to accurately estimate the inter- and the intra- class variance, substantially larger datasets are required [40]. Covariates such as facial expression, headwear, footwear type, surface type and carried items are attracting increasing attention; although considering the potentially large impact on an individuals biometrics, large trials need to be conducted to establish how much variance results. This chapter is the first description of the multibiometric data acquired using the University of Southampton's Multi-Biometric Tunnel [26, 37]; a biometric portal using automatic gait, face and ear recognition for identification purposes. The tunnel provides a constrained environment and is ideal for use in high throughput security scenarios and for the collection of large datasets. We describe the current state of data acquisition of face, gait, ear, and semantic data and present early results showing the quality and range of data that has been collected. The main novelties of this dataset in comparison with other multi-biometric datasets are: 1. gait data exists for multiple views and is synchronised, allowing 3D reconstruction and analysis; 2. the face data is a sequence of images allowing for face recognition in video; 3. the ear data is acquired in a relatively unconstrained environment, as a subject walks past; and 4. the semantic data is considerably more extensive than has been available previously. We shall aim to show the advantages of this new data in biometric analysis, though the scope for such analysis is considerably greater than time and space allows for here
Ear Identification by Fusion of Segmented Slice Regions using Invariant Features: An Experimental Manifold with Dual Fusion Approach
This paper proposes a robust ear identification system which is developed by
fusing SIFT features of color segmented slice regions of an ear. The proposed
ear identification method makes use of Gaussian mixture model (GMM) to build
ear model with mixture of Gaussian using vector quantization algorithm and K-L
divergence is applied to the GMM framework for recording the color similarity
in the specified ranges by comparing color similarity between a pair of
reference ear and probe ear. SIFT features are then detected and extracted from
each color slice region as a part of invariant feature extraction. The
extracted keypoints are then fused separately by the two fusion approaches,
namely concatenation and the Dempster-Shafer theory. Finally, the fusion
approaches generate two independent augmented feature vectors which are used
for identification of individuals separately. The proposed identification
technique is tested on IIT Kanpur ear database of 400 individuals and is found
to achieve 98.25% accuracy for identification while top 5 matched criteria is
set for each subject.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figure
Modified Firefly Optimization with Deep Learning based Multimodal Biometric Verification Model
Biometric security has become a main concern in the data security field. Over the years, initiatives in the biometrics field had an increasing growth rate. The multimodal biometric method with greater recognition and precision rate for smart cities remains to be a challenge. By comparison, made with the single biometric recognition, we considered the multimodal biometric recognition related to finger vein and fingerprint since it has high security, accurate recognition, and convenient sample collection. This article presents a Modified Firefly Optimization with Deep Learning based Multimodal Biometric Verification (MFFODL-MBV) model. The presented MFFODL-MBV technique performs biometric verification using multiple biometrics such as fingerprint, DNA, and microarray. In the presented MFFODL-MBV technique, EfficientNet model is employed for feature extraction. For biometric recognition, MFFO algorithm with long short-term memory (LSTM) model is applied with MFFO algorithm as hyperparameter optimizer. To ensure the improved outcomes of the MFFODL-MBV approach, a widespread experimental analysis was performed. The wide-ranging experimental analysis reported improvements in the MFFODL-MBV technique over other models
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Pattern mining approaches used in sensor-based biometric recognition: a review
Sensing technologies place significant interest in the use of biometrics for the recognition and assessment of individuals. Pattern mining techniques have established a critical step in the progress of sensor-based biometric systems that are capable of perceiving, recognizing and computing sensor data, being a technology that searches for the high-level information about pattern recognition from low-level sensor readings in order to construct an artificial substitute for human recognition. The design of a successful sensor-based biometric recognition system needs to pay attention to the different issues involved in processing variable data being - acquisition of biometric data from a sensor, data pre-processing, feature extraction, recognition and/or classification, clustering and validation. A significant number of approaches from image processing, pattern identification and machine learning have been used to process sensor data. This paper aims to deliver a state-of-the-art summary and present strategies for utilizing the broadly utilized pattern mining methods in order to identify the challenges as well as future research directions of sensor-based biometric systems
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