310 research outputs found

    Multi-bits biometric string generation based on the likelyhood ratio

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    Preserving the privacy of biometric information stored in biometric systems is becoming a key issue. An important element in privacy protecting biometric systems is the quantizer which transforms a normal biometric template into a binary string. In this paper, we present a user-specific quantization method based on a likelihood ratio approach (LQ). The bits generated from every feature are concatenated to form a fixed length binary string that can be hashed to protect its privacy. Experiments are carried out on both fingerprint data (FVC2000) and face data (FRGC). Results show that our proposed quantization method achieves a reasonably good performance in terms of FAR/FRR (when FAR is 10−4, the corresponding FRR are 16.7% and 5.77% for FVC2000 and FRGC, respectively)

    The Role of Anti-Müllerian Hormone in Ovarian Function, Dysfunction and Aging

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    The ovary is of major importance for both reproduction and the endocrine status of women. Follicle development in the ovary is regulated by gonadotropins but also by intra-ovarian factors, such as anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH). In mice, AMH inhibits primordial follicle recruitment, thereby influencing ovarian aging, and suppresses FSH sensitivity of growing follicles. The aim of this thesis was to investigate the role of the AMH signaling pathway in the mouse and human ovary. Our studies in mice showed that serum AMH levels reflect the size of the primordial follicle pool, and therefore, AMH is a useful marker for the ovarian reserve. The role of the AMH signaling pathway in human ovarian physiology was studied using a genetic approach. Frequent polymorphisms in several genes of the AMH signaling pathway (AMH, AMHR2, and ACVR1) were identified, and associated with various endpoints of ovarian function using large population-based and case- control cohorts of women. We observed that the AMHR2 polymorphism was associated with age at menopause in interaction with the number of offspring. Association studies in normo-ovulatory women revealed that AMH and AMHR2 polymorphisms were associated with estradiol levels, suggesting a role for AMH in the regulation of FSH sensitivity in the human ovary. In addition, the role of AMH signaling in the pathophysiology of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) was studied. Our results suggest that AMH signaling contribute! s to the severity of the PCOS phenotype. The studies described in this thesis show that AMH will contribute to a better understanding of ovarian function, dysfunction and aging. Eventually, this may lead to improved treatment of infertility and of health problems related to ovarian aging in women

    PLANET : a hierarchical network simulator

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    Operational amplifiers

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    Binary Biometrics: An Analytic Framework to Estimate the Bit Error Probability under Gaussian Assumption

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    In recent years the protection of biometric data has gained increased interest from the scientific community. Methods such as the helper data system, fuzzy extractors, fuzzy vault and cancellable biometrics have been proposed for protecting biometric data. Most of these methods use cryptographic primitives and require a binary representation from the real-valued biometric data. Hence, the similarity of biometric samples is measured in terms of the Hamming distance between the binary vector obtained at the enrolment and verification phase. The number of errors depends on the expected error probability Pe of each bit between two biometric samples of the same subject. In this paper we introduce a framework for analytically estimating Pe under the assumption that the within-and between-class distribution can be modeled by a Gaussian distribution. We present the analytic expression of Pe as a function of the number of samples used at the enrolment (Ne) and verification (Nv) phases. The analytic expressions are validated using the FRGC v2 and FVC2000 biometric databases

    A quality integrated spectral minutiae fingerprint recognition system

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    Many fingerprint recognition systems are based on minutiae matching. However, the recognition accuracy of minutiae-based matching algorithms is highly dependent on the fingerprint minutiae quality. Therefore, in this paper, we introduce a quality integrated spectral minutiae algorithm, in which the minutiae quality information is incorporated to enhance the performance of the spectral minutiae fingerprint recognition system. In our algorithm, two types of quality data are used. The first is the minutiae reliability, expressing the probability that a given point is indeed a minutia; the second is the minutiae location accuracy, quantifying the error on the minutiae location. We integrate these two types of quality information into the spectral minutiae representation algorithm and achieve a decrease of 1% in equal error rate in the experiment

    Spectral representation of fingerprints

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    Most fingerprint recognition systems are based on the use of a minutiae set, which is an unordered collection of minutiae locations and directions suffering from various deformations such as translation, rotation and scaling. The spectral minutiae representation introduced in this paper is a novel method to represent a minutiae set as a fixed-length feature vector, which is invariant to translation, and in which rotation and scaling become translations, so that they can be easily compensated for. These characteristics enable the combination of fingerprint recognition systems with a template protection scheme, which requires a fixed-length feature vector. This paper introduces the idea and algorithm of spectral minutiae representation. A correlation based spectral minutiae\ud matching algorithm is presented and evaluated. The scheme shows a promising result, with an equal error rate of 0.2% on manually extracted minutiae

    Fingerprint Verification Using Spectral Minutiae Representations

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    Most fingerprint recognition systems are based on the use of a minutiae set, which is an unordered collection of minutiae locations and orientations suffering from various deformations such as translation, rotation, and scaling. The spectral minutiae representation introduced in this paper is a novel method to represent a minutiae set as a fixed-length feature vector, which is invariant to translation, and in which rotation and scaling become translations, so that they can be easily compensated for. These characteristics enable the combination of fingerprint recognition systems with template protection schemes that require a fixed-length feature vector. This paper introduces the concept of algorithms for two representation methods: the location-based spectral minutiae representation and the orientation-based spectral minutiae representation. Both algorithms are evaluated using two correlation-based spectral minutiae matching algorithms. We present the performance of our algorithms on three fingerprint databases. We also show how the performance can be improved by using a fusion scheme and singular points

    Binary Biometrics: An Analytic Framework to Estimate the Performance Curves Under Gaussian Assumption

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    In recent years, the protection of biometric data has gained increased interest from the scientific community. Methods such as the fuzzy commitment scheme, helper-data system, fuzzy extractors, fuzzy vault, and cancelable biometrics have been proposed for protecting biometric data. Most of these methods use cryptographic primitives or error-correcting codes (ECCs) and use a binary representation of the real-valued biometric data. Hence, the difference between two biometric samples is given by the Hamming distance (HD) or bit errors between the binary vectors obtained from the enrollment and verification phases, respectively. If the HD is smaller (larger) than the decision threshold, then the subject is accepted (rejected) as genuine. Because of the use of ECCs, this decision threshold is limited to the maximum error-correcting capacity of the code, consequently limiting the false rejection rate (FRR) and false acceptance rate tradeoff. A method to improve the FRR consists of using multiple biometric samples in either the enrollment or verification phase. The noise is suppressed, hence reducing the number of bit errors and decreasing the HD. In practice, the number of samples is empirically chosen without fully considering its fundamental impact. In this paper, we present a Gaussian analytical framework for estimating the performance of a binary biometric system given the number of samples being used in the enrollment and the verification phase. The error-detection tradeoff curve that combines the false acceptance and false rejection rates is estimated to assess the system performance. The analytic expressions are validated using the Face Recognition Grand Challenge v2 and Fingerprint Verification Competition 2000 biometric databases
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