Biometric
systems establish the identity of an individual based on physical characteristics,
such as fingerprint, face, hand, and iris, or behavioral characteristics, such
as gait, signature, handwriting, and keystroke dynamics. Interest in biometrics
has grown significantly over the last three decades. Consequently, both academic
as well as corporate research units have devoted plenty of resources to the study,
research, and development of accurate and cost-effective biometric systems. Biometric
authentication systems are now being used in a wide range of applications,
including border security, automated surveillance, physical access control, and
network security.
A typical biometric system consists of a sensor module for acquiring the
biometric signal of an individual, a feature extraction module for extracting
discriminant features from the signal, a matching module for comparing two sets
of features, and a decision module for establishing the identity of the
individual. In spite of the rapid advances made in the field of biometrics,
there are still several challenges that need to be addressed in order to
broaden the scope and deployment of biometrics. The most important ones among
these include (i) accurate modeling of intrauser variations of a biometric
signal; (ii) scaling the system to accommodate a large number of users (e.g.,
in the order of millions); (iii) protecting biometric templates and “canceling”
them if needed; (iv) operating the system in an unconstrained environment
involving noncooperative individuals; and (v) reinforcing the identity of an
individual by consolidating the evidence of multiple biometric sources. A
number of test suites have been developed, especially for face, fingerprint,
iris, and voice systems, in order to gauge the matching accuracy of the state-of-the-art
biometric algorithms. Results suggest that there is plenty of scope for
improving the performance of biometric systems and incorporating them in
diverse applications.
This
special issue contains contributions covering a wide spectrum of topics in biometrics.
The majority of the papers present methods for human recognition based on facial
images, walking style (gait), fingerprints, signature, iris,and retina. There
are also papers presenting newmethodsbased on electrocardiogram (EEG) and electroencephalogram
(EEC). Other papers discuss
techniques for biometric fusion and enhancing template security. As a whole,
the special issue includes a very diverse collection of high-qualitycontributions authored by leading researchers in the field.
The first paper, by A. K. Jain et al., presents an extensive categorization of the various vulnerabilities of a biometric system, and discusses countermeasures
that have been proposed to address these vulnerabilities. Special emphasis is placed
on biometric template security which is an important issue because, unlike
passwords and tokens, compromised biometric templates cannot be easily revoked
and reissued.
The second paper, by Z. Yue et al., deals with face recognition. The objective of their
work is to identify a sub-ject from a probe image acquired under different pose
and illumination conditions in the presence of only a single gallery image of
the subject in the database. The authors of this paper extend the spherical
harmonics representation to encode pose information.
The next paper, by P. R. Nicholl et al., performs face recognition by combining the
multiresolution feature of the discrete wavelet transform (DWT) with the local
interactions of the facial structures expressed through the structural hidden
Markov model (SHMM). Experimental results suggest the benefits of employing
SHMMs over traditional HMMs.
The
paper by Y. Xu et al. presents a framework for video-based face recognition
that is robust to large changes in facial pose and lighting conditions. The proposed
method advocates a novel theoretical framework that can integrate the effects
of motion, lighting, and shape in generating an image using a perspective
camera. The method can handle situations where the pose and lighting conditions
of the training and testing data are completely different.
The
paper by S.-K. Kim et al. presents a method for face recognition using
ancillary information. Specifically, the authors fuse the local and global
information contained within a facial image in an adaptive manner for reliable
recognition. Additionally, they explicitly estimate external factors such as
pose and illumination, and incorporate this information in the fusion
framework. Empirical evaluations indicate that the
adoption of the proposed method leads to noticeable improvements in matching
performance.
The
paper by J. Uglov et al. addresses the impact of noisy facial images on the
performance of face recognition system. Although multiclass neural networks can
be used for combating the above problems, such systems are not robust when the
number of subjects is increased. The paper explores a pairwise neural network
system as an alternative approach to improving the robustness of face
recognition. Experiments show that the pairwise recognition system outperforms
the multiclass recognition system in terms of its predictiveaccuracy on the
test face images.
The next two papers are on gait recognition. Thefirst paper is authored by H. Lu et
al. and presents a full-body layered deformable model (LDM) for automatic model-based
gait recognition. In this paper, algorithms for LDM-based human body pose
recovery are developed to estimate the LDM parameters from both manually
labeled andautomatically extracted silhouettes. The estimated LDM parameters
are used for model-based gait recognition. The results demonstrate that the
recognition performance benefits from not only the lower-limb dynamics, but
also the dynamics of the upper limbs, the shoulders, and the head. The second paper is authored by X. Huang and N.V. Boulgouris and presents a gait
recognition method based on multiview gait sequences. This paper investigates
the case in which several views are available for gait recognition. It is shown
that each view has unequal discrimination power and, therefore, should have
unequal contribution in the recognition process. A novel approach for the
combination of the results from several views is also proposed based on the
relative importance of each view.
I. G. Damousis et al. discuss the design of a multimodal biometric system which
was carried out in the framework of a European project. The authors discuss the
combination of new types of biometrics with the state-of-the-art sensor technologies
in order to enhance security in a wide spectrum of applications. The objective
is to develop a modular,robust, multimodal biometrics security authentication
and monitoring system which utilizes a biodynamic physiological profile, unique
for each individual. An additional objective is to make advancements in the
state of the art in behavioral and other biometrics.
The paper by N. Balasubramanian et al. presents a meth-od for person-independent
head pose estimation. Theestimation of head-pose angle is necessary and useful
for several face analysis applications. In this paper, a framework is proposed for
a supervised form of manifold learning called biased manifold embedding. The
proposed framework goes beyond pose estimation, and can be applied to all
regression applications. Using the proposed framework, improvedperformance in
head pose angle estimation isachieved.
The paper by F. M. Bui and D. Hatzinakos presents biometric methods for secure communications
in bodysensor networks. The privacy and security arrangements are particularly
important in this case since body sensor networks allow pervasive monitoring of
potentially sensitive medical data. Two complementary methods are presented
based on resource-efficient key management and signal-level data scrambling.
Using computer simulations, it is shown that they are very appropriate for
delivering secure communications in body sensor networks.
The paper by A. Zimmer and L. Ling presents anoffline signature verification system
based on online data. Inthis paper, the online reference data, acquired
through a digitizing tablet, serve as the basis for the segmentation process of
the corresponding scanned offline data. Local windows are built over the image
through a self-adjustable learning process and are used to focus the feature
extraction step. In this way, local features are extracted and used by the
classifier in combination with global primitives.
The next two papers present biometric systems based on signals captured from the human body. The paperby Y. Wang et al.
presents a biometric system based on the analysis of human electrocardiograms.
The paper develops a methodology based on existing evidence that human
heartbeat could be used as a “difficult-to-falsify” biometric trait. The paper introduces a fiducial detection-based
framework that incorporates analytic and appearance attributes. The
appearance-based approach needs detection of one fiducial point only. The second paper by A. Riera et al. describes
an unobtrusive biometric system based on electroencephalogram analysis. The
paper is based on the fact that features extracted from electroencephalogram
(EEG) recordings have proved to be unique enough across subjects for biometric
applications. A rapid and unobtrusive authentication method is presented that
uses only two frontal electrodes and one reference placed at the ear lobe. The resulting
matching performance indicates an improvement over that of similar systems
presented in an earlier work.
The
next three papers deal with problems relevant to identification based on the
human eye. The first paper, by H.-A. Park et al., is a study on iris localization
and recognition using mobile phones. This paper presents a new iris recognition
method for mobile phones based on corneal specular reflections (SRs). Novel methods are introduced for (i) the accurate detection of SRs on the cornea of users with glasses, (ii) the robust detection of SRs using eye, camera, and illumination
models, and (iii) the verification of the detected iris region. Experimental results based on facial images captured from persons with a mobile phone camera indicate very high rates of correct iris detection. The second paper, by H. Farzin et al., presents a novel retinal identification system. This system comprises of three principal modules including blood vessel segmentation, feature generation, and feature matching. The position and the orientation of the extracted vessels in each scale are used to define a feature vector for each subject in the
database. For matching these features across images, a modified correlation measure is introduced in order to obtain a similarity index for each scale of the feature vector. The third paper, authored by J. Wu et al., presents a method for the simultaneous eye tracking and blink detection with interactive particle
filters. To this end, two interactive particle filters are used, one for closed eyes and the other for open eyes. Each particle filter is used to track the eye locations and the scales of the eye subjects. Experimental evaluation confirms the utility of the proposed algorithm.
The last paper, by F. Benhammadi et al., presents a fingerprint recognizer using an interminutiae binary constraint graph. The proposed matcher exploits the absolute
minutiae features represented as a binary constraint graph. A dynamic tolerance area in the neighborhood of the minutiae, combined with the search-rearrangement method on the binary constraint graph, is used to perform the global matching. Experimental evaluations suggest that the proposed method
is promising.
Acknowledgments
The
guest editors would like to thank the authors who contributed to the present collection
of high-quality papers. They are also very grateful to the reviewers for
scrutinizing the submitted manuscripts and for suggesting modifications that enhanced
the quality of the accepted manuscripts. Last, but certainly not least, they would
like to thank the Editor-in-Chief and the Editorial Office of EURASIP Journal
on Advances in Signal Processing for their continuous efforts and support.
Nikolaos V. Boulgouris
Juwei Lu
Konstantinos N. Plataniotis
Arun Ross