23 research outputs found

    Palmprint Gender Classification Using Deep Learning Methods

    Get PDF
    Gender identification is an important technique that can improve the performance of authentication systems by reducing searching space and speeding up the matching process. Several biometric traits have been used to ascertain human gender. Among them, the human palmprint possesses several discriminating features such as principal-lines, wrinkles, ridges, and minutiae features and that offer cues for gender identification. The goal of this work is to develop novel deep-learning techniques to determine gender from palmprint images. PolyU and CASIA palmprint databases with 90,000 and 5502 images respectively were used for training and testing purposes in this research. After ROI extraction and data augmentation were performed, various convolutional and deep learning-based classification approaches were empirically designed, optimized, and tested. Results of gender classification as high as 94.87% were achieved on the PolyU palmprint database and 90.70% accuracy on the CASIA palmprint database. Optimal performance was achieved by combining two different pre-trained and fine-tuned deep CNNs (VGGNet and DenseNet) through score level average fusion. In addition, Gradient-weighted Class Activation Mapping (Grad-CAM) was also implemented to ascertain which specific regions of the palmprint are most discriminative for gender classification

    Fingerabdruckswachstumvorhersage, Bildvorverarbeitung und Multi-level Judgment Aggregation

    Get PDF
    Im ersten Teil dieser Arbeit wird Fingerwachstum untersucht und eine Methode zur Vorhersage von Wachstum wird vorgestellt. Die Effektivität dieser Methode wird mittels mehrerer Tests validiert. Vorverarbeitung von Fingerabdrucksbildern wird im zweiten Teil behandelt und neue Methoden zur Schätzung des Orientierungsfelds und der Ridge-Frequenz sowie zur Bildverbesserung werden vorgestellt: Die Line Sensor Methode zur Orientierungsfeldschätzung, gebogene Regionen zur Ridge-Frequenz-Schätzung und gebogene Gabor Filter zur Bildverbesserung. Multi-level Jugdment Aggregation wird eingeführt als Design Prinzip zur Kombination mehrerer Methoden auf mehreren Verarbeitungsstufen. Schließlich wird Score Neubewertung vorgestellt, um Informationen aus der Vorverarbeitung mit in die Score Bildung einzubeziehen. Anhand eines Anwendungsbeispiels wird die Wirksamkeit dieses Ansatzes auf den verfügbaren FVC-Datenbanken gezeigt.Finger growth is studied in the first part of the thesis and a method for growth prediction is presented. The effectiveness of the method is validated in several tests. Fingerprint image preprocessing is discussed in the second part and novel methods for orientation field estimation, ridge frequency estimation and image enhancement are proposed: the line sensor method for orientation estimation provides more robustness to noise than state of the art methods. Curved regions are proposed for improving the ridge frequency estimation and curved Gabor filters for image enhancement. The notion of multi-level judgment aggregation is introduced as a design principle for combining different methods at all levels of fingerprint image processing. Lastly, score revaluation is proposed for incorporating information obtained during preprocessing into the score, and thus amending the quality of the similarity measure at the final stage. A sample application combines all proposed methods of the second part and demonstrates the validity of the approach by achieving massive verification performance improvements in comparison to state of the art software on all available databases of the fingerprint verification competitions (FVC)

    Fingerprint Recognition: A Histogram Analysis Based Fuzzy C-Means Multilevel Structural Approach

    Get PDF
    In order to fight identity fraud, the use of a reliable personal identifier has become a necessity. Fingerprints are considered one of the best biometric measurements and are used as a universal personal identifier. There are two main phases in the recognition of personal identity using fingerprints: 1) extraction of suitable features of fingerprints, and 2) fingerprint matching making use of the extracted features to find the correspondence and similarity between the fingerprint images. Use of global features in minutia-based fingerprint recognition schemes enhances their recognition capability but at the expense of a substantially increased complexity. The recognition accuracies of most of the fingerprint recognition schemes, which rely on some sort of crisp clustering of the fingerprint features, are adversely affected due to the problems associated with the behavioral and anatomical characteristics of the fingerprints. The objective of this research is to develop efficient and cost-effective techniques for fingerprint recognition, that can meet the challenges arising from using both the local and global features of the fingerprints as well as effectively deal with the problems resulting from the crisp clustering of the fingerprint features. To this end, the structural information of local and global features of fingerprints are used for their decomposition, representation and matching in a multilevel hierarchical framework. The problems associated with the crisp clustering of the fingerprint features are addressed by incorporating the ideas of fuzzy logic in developing the various stages of the proposed fingerprint recognition scheme. In the first part of this thesis, a novel low-complexity multilevel structural scheme for fingerprint recognition (MSFR) is proposed by first decomposing fingerprint images into regions based on crisp partitioning of some global features of the fingerprints. Then, multilevel feature vectors representing the structural information of the fingerprints are formulated by employing both the global and local features, and a fast multilevel matching algorithm using this representation is devised. Inspired by the ability of fuzzy-based clustering techniques in dealing more effectively with the natural patterns, in the second part of the thesis, a new fuzzy based clustering technique that can deal with the partitioning problem of the fingerprint having the behavioral and anatomical characteristics is proposed and then used to develop a fuzzy based multilevel structural fingerprint recognition scheme. First, a histogram analysis fuzzy c-means (HA-FCM) clustering technique is devised for the partitioning of the fingerprints. The parameters of this partitioning technique, i.e., the number of clusters and the set of initial cluster centers, are determined in an automated manner by employing the histogram of the fingerprint orientation field. The development of the HA-FCM partitioning scheme is further pursued to devise an enhanced HA-FCM (EAH-FCM) algorithm. In this algorithm, the smoothness of the fingerprint partitioning is improved through a regularization of the fingerprint orientation field, and the computational complexity is reduced by decreasing the number of operations and by increasing the convergence rate of the underlying iterative process of the HA-FCM technique. Finally, a new fuzzy based fingerprint recognition scheme (FMSFR), based on the EHA-FCM partitioning scheme and the basic ideas used in the development of the MSFR scheme, is proposed. Extensive experiments are conducted throughout this thesis using a number of challenging benchmark databases. These databases are selected from the FVC2002, FVC2004 and FVC2006 competitions containing a wide variety of challenges for fingerprint recognition. Simulation results demonstrate not only the effectiveness of the proposed techniques and schemes but also their superiority over some of the state-of-the-art techniques, in terms of the recognition accuracy and the computational complexity

    Image Compression Techniques: A Survey in Lossless and Lossy algorithms

    Get PDF
    The bandwidth of the communication networks has been increased continuously as results of technological advances. However, the introduction of new services and the expansion of the existing ones have resulted in even higher demand for the bandwidth. This explains the many efforts currently being invested in the area of data compression. The primary goal of these works is to develop techniques of coding information sources such as speech, image and video to reduce the number of bits required to represent a source without significantly degrading its quality. With the large increase in the generation of digital image data, there has been a correspondingly large increase in research activity in the field of image compression. The goal is to represent an image in the fewest number of bits without losing the essential information content within. Images carry three main type of information: redundant, irrelevant, and useful. Redundant information is the deterministic part of the information, which can be reproduced without loss from other information contained in the image. Irrelevant information is the part of information that has enormous details, which are beyond the limit of perceptual significance (i.e., psychovisual redundancy). Useful information, on the other hand, is the part of information, which is neither redundant nor irrelevant. Human usually observes decompressed images. Therefore, their fidelities are subject to the capabilities and limitations of the Human Visual System. This paper provides a survey on various image compression techniques, their limitations, compression rates and highlights current research in medical image compression

    A survey on video compression fast block matching algorithms

    Get PDF
    Video compression is the process of reducing the amount of data required to represent digital video while preserving an acceptable video quality. Recent studies on video compression have focused on multimedia transmission, videophones, teleconferencing, high definition television, CD-ROM storage, etc. The idea of compression techniques is to remove the redundant information that exists in the video sequences. Motion compensation predictive coding is the main coding tool for removing temporal redundancy of video sequences and it typically accounts for 50–80% of video encoding complexity. This technique has been adopted by all of the existing International Video Coding Standards. It assumes that the current frame can be locally modelled as a translation of the reference frames. The practical and widely method used to carry out motion compensated prediction is block matching algorithm. In this method, video frames are divided into a set of non-overlapped macroblocks and compared with the search area in the reference frame in order to find the best matching macroblock. This will carry out displacement vectors that stipulate the movement of the macroblocks from one location to another in the reference frame. Checking all these locations is called Full Search, which provides the best result. However, this algorithm suffers from long computational time, which necessitates improvement. Several methods of Fast Block Matching algorithm are developed to reduce the computation complexity. This paper focuses on a survey for two video compression techniques: the first is called the lossless block matching algorithm process, in which the computational time required to determine the matching macroblock of the Full Search is decreased while the resolution of the predicted frames is the same as for the Full Search. The second is called lossy block matching algorithm process, which reduces the computational complexity effectively but the search result's quality is not the same as for the Full Search

    Irish Machine Vision and Image Processing Conference Proceedings 2017

    Get PDF

    Biometric Systems

    Get PDF
    Because of the accelerating progress in biometrics research and the latest nation-state threats to security, this book's publication is not only timely but also much needed. This volume contains seventeen peer-reviewed chapters reporting the state of the art in biometrics research: security issues, signature verification, fingerprint identification, wrist vascular biometrics, ear detection, face detection and identification (including a new survey of face recognition), person re-identification, electrocardiogram (ECT) recognition, and several multi-modal systems. This book will be a valuable resource for graduate students, engineers, and researchers interested in understanding and investigating this important field of study
    corecore