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Fusing Face and ECG for Personal Identification
Washington, DC October 15-October 17
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/AIPR.2003.128427632nd Applied Imagery Pattern Recognit ...
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Steven A. Israel, SAIC, Arlington, Virginia
W. Todd Scruggs, SAIC, Arlington, Virginia
William J. Worek, SAIC, Arlington, Virginia
John M. Irvine, SAIC, Burlington, Massachusetts
Single modality biometric identification systems exhibit performance that may not be adequate for many security applications. Face and fingerprint modalities dominate the biometric verification / identification field. However, both face and fingerprint can be compromised using counterfeit credentials. Previous research has demonstrated the use of the electrocardiogram (ECG) as a novel biometric. This paper explores the fusion of a traditional face recognition technique with ECG. System performance with multimodality fusion can be superior to reliance on a single biometric, but performance depends heavily on the fusion technique. In addition, a fusion-based system is more difficult to defeat, since an imposter must provide counterfeit credentials for both face and cardiovascular function.
Citation:
Steven A. Israel, W. Todd Scruggs, William J. Worek, John M. Irvine, "Fusing Face and ECG for Personal Identification," aipr, pp.226, 32nd Applied Imagery Pattern Recognition Workshop (AIPR'03), 2003
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