This paper studies the problem of reproducible research in remote
photoplethysmography (rPPG). Most of the work published in this domain is
assessed on privately-owned databases, making it difficult to evaluate proposed
algorithms in a standard and principled manner. As a consequence, we present a
new, publicly available database containing a relatively large number of
subjects recorded under two different lighting conditions. Also, three
state-of-the-art rPPG algorithms from the literature were selected, implemented
and released as open source free software. After a thorough, unbiased
experimental evaluation in various settings, it is shown that none of the
selected algorithms is precise enough to be used in a real-world scenario