Face Recognisation Technology
Face Recognisation Technology
Face Recognisation Technology
a.Finger-scan a. Voice-scan
b. Facial Recognition b. Signature-scan
c. Iris-scan c. Keystroke-scan
d. Retina-scan
e. Hand-scan
WHY WE CHOOSE FACE
RECOGNITION TECHNOLOGY
It requires no physical interaction on behalf
of the user.
It is accurate and allows for high enrolment
and verification rates.
It does not require an expert to interpret the
comparison result.
It can use your existing hardware
infrastructure, existing camaras and image
capture Devices will work with no problems
It is the only biometric that allow you to
perform passive identification in a one to.
FACE RECOGNITION
face recognition there are two types of
comparisons .
VERIFICATION-in this the system
compares the given individual with who
that individual says they are and gives a
yes or no decision.
IDENTIFICATION- in this the system
compares the given individual to all the
Other individuals in the database and
gives a ranked list of matches.
All identification or authentication technologies
operate using the following four stages:
Capture: A physical or behavioural sample is
captured by the system during Enrollment and
also in identification or verification process.
Extraction: unique data is extracted from the
sample and a template is created.
Comparison: the template is then compared
with a new sample.
Match/non match: the system decides if the
features extracted from the new Samples are
a match or a non match.
CAPTURING OF IMAGE BY
STANDARD VIDEO
CAMERAS
The image is optical in characteristics and may be thought
of as a collection of a large number of bright and dark
areas representing the picture details.
At an instant there will be large number of picture details
existing simultaneously each representing the level of
brightness of the scene to be reproduced.
Therefore it would require infinite number of channels to
transmit optical information corresponding to picture
elements simultaneously.
There is practical difficulty in transmitting all information
simultaneously so we use a method called scanning.
the conversion of optical information to electrical form and
its transmission is carried out element by element one at
a time in a sequential manner to cover the entire image.
WORKING OF VEDIO
CAMERA
A TV camera converts optical information into
electrical information, the amplitude of which
varies in accordance with variation of
brightness.
An optical image of the scene to be
transmitted is focused by lense assembly on
the rectangular glass plate of the camera tube.
The inner side of this has a transparent
coating on which is laid a very thin layer of
photoconductive material. The photolayer has
very high resistance when no light is falling on
it but decreases depending on the intensity of
light falling on it.
An electron beam is formed by an electron
gun in the TV camera tube.
This beam is used to pick up the picture
information now avilable on the target plate
of varying resistace at each point.
The electron beam is deflected by a pair of
deflecting coils mounted on the glass
envelope and kept mutually perpendicular to
each other to achive scanning of the entire
target area.
The deflecting coils are fed seperately
from two sweep oscillators, each
operating at different frequencies.
The magnetic deflection caused by
current in one coil gives horizontal
motion to the beam from left to right at
a uniform rate and brings it back to the
left side to commence the trace of the
next line.
The other coil is used to deflect the
beam from top to bottom.
As the beam moves from element to element it
encounters different resistance across the
target plate depending on the resistance of the
photoconductive coating.
The result is flow of current which varies in
magnitude as elements are scanned.
The current passes through the load
resistance Rl connected to conductive coating
on one side of the DC supply source on the
other.
Depending on the magnitude of current a
varying voltage appears across the resistance
Rl and this corresponds to the optical
information of the picture
PERFORMANCE
False acceptance rate (FAR) -The
probability that a system will incorrectly
identify an individual or will fail to reject an
imposter. It is also called as type 2 error
rate
FAR= NFA/NIIA
Where
NFA= number of false acceptance
NIIA= number of imposter identification
attempts
False rejection rates (FRR) -The
probability that a system will fail to
identify an enrollee. It is also called type
1 error rate.
FRR= NFR/NEIA
where
NFR= number of false rejection rates
NEIA= number of enrollee identification
attempt
Response time: The time period required by
a biometric system to return a decision on
identification of a sample.
decision Threshold: The acceptance or
rejection of a data is dependent on the match
score falling above or below the threshold. The
threshold is adjustable so that the system can
be made more or less strict; depending on the
requirements of any given application.
Enrollment time: The time period a person
must spend to have his/her facial reference
templatesuccessfully created.
IMPLEMENTATION OF FACE
RECOGNITION TECHNOLOGY
The implementation of face recognition
technology includes the following four
stages:
Data acquisition
Input processing
Face image classification
decision making
Data acquisition