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Hand Geometry Recognition

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Presentation on theme: "Hand Geometry Recognition"— Presentation transcript:

1 Hand Geometry Recognition
Dr. Gökhan Şengül

2 Outline: Hand Geometry as Biometrics Methods Used for Recognition
Illustrations and Examples Some Useful Links References

3 Hand Geometry Hand geometry is a biometric technique, which identifies person through the hand geometry measurements. Some geometric structures related to a human hand (e.g., length and width of hand) are relatively invariant to an individual.

4 Hand Geometry Characterized by its lengths, widths, shapes etc.
Advantages: (1) Acquisition convenience and good verification performance (2) Suitable for medium and low security applications (3) Ease of Integration Disadvantages: (1)Large size of hand geometry devices (2)Only used for verification (3)Single hand use only Picture taken from:

5 Hand Geometry Properties:
Medium cost as it need a platform and a medium resolution CCD camera. It use low-computational cost algorithms, which leads to fast results. Low template size: from 9-25 bytes, which reduces the storage needs. Very easy and attractive to users: leading to nearly null user rejection.

6 Application Hand geometry information is not very distinctive
The hand based biometric systems can be employed in those applications which don't require extreme security but where robustness and low-cost are primary issues. Fingerprint and iris, may not be acceptable for the sake of protecting an individual's privacy. In such situations, it is desirable that the given biometric indicator be only distinctive enough for verication but not for identication. As hand geometry information is not very distinctive, it is one of the biometrics of choice in applications like those mentioned above.

7 Comparison between biometrics

8 Hand Geometry Verification System

9 Hand Geometry Biometric System
Biometrics System Image Processing Feature Extraction Feature Matching

10 System demonstration Hand Geometry Verification System

11 A flowchart for hand feature extraction and matching
System demonstration Hand Subsystem A flowchart for hand feature extraction and matching

12 Binarization (1) Change input RGB image into gray-level image
(2) Change the gray-level image into white-black image. (3) Due to illumination problems, Median filtering to remove noise is used. G(i,j) represents the gray value of pixel (i,j) after binarization, I(i,j) represent the original gray value.

13 Binarization Results (a) Input Image (b)Gray-Scale (c) Before filtering (d)After filtering

14 Border Tracing (1) Searching for the starting point
(2) Use the following algorithm In this stage, contour of the hand shape is obtained from the binary image by using border tracing algorithm. The process starts by scanning the pixels of the binary image from the bottom-left to the right. When the first black pixel is detected the border tracing algorithm using eight neighborhood pixels is initiated to trace the border of the hand in clockwise directions. During the border tracing process, all the coordinates of the border pixels were recorded. (3) All the coordinates of the border are recorded

15 Border Tracing (a) Binary Hand (b) Hand Contour

16 Point Extraction Purpose: To pinpoint the five finger tips and four finger roots. Method: Depict the vertical coordinates of all contour pixels

17 Points Extraction By computing the first-order differential of vertical coordinates of f(i), mark where differential sign changing from -1 to 1 as finger tips, where differential sign changing from 1 to -1 as finger roots.

18 Measurement Generate a feature vector Vh, including 5 lengths of fingers, 10 widths of fingers, and the width between v1 to v2.

19 Feature Vector Matching
Let F = (f1; f2; :::; fd) represent the d-dimensional feature vector in the database associated with the claimed identity and Y = (y1; y2; :::; yd) be the feature vector of the hand whose identity has to be verified. The verification is positive if the distance between F and Y is less than a threshold value. Distance metrics, absolute, weighted absolute, Euclidean are used to compute distance. The verification process involves comparison between the enrollment feature vectors and the test feature vectors in order to find the most minimal distance.

20 Distance Matrices Matching
Absolute distance metric Weighted absolute metric Euclidean distance metric

21 Other Feature Matching Algorithms
Hamming Distance This distance doesn’t measure the difference between components of the feature vectors, but the number of components that differ in value.

22 Other Feature Matching Algorithms
Gaussian Mixture Models This is a pattern recognition technique that uses an approach between the statistical methods and the neural networks. It is based on modeling the patterns with a determined number of Gaussian distributions, giving the probability of the sample belonging to that class or not. The probability density of a sample belonging to a class u is:

23 Other Feature Matching Algorithms
Radial Basis Function Neural Networks A neural networks method. First train the net using a set of feature vectors from all the users enrolled in the system, and each output will correspond to each class. Then, the new feature vector is inputted into the net, and classified as one of the class in the database.

24 Performance Evaluation
FAR and FRR stands for false acceptance rate and false rejection rate, respectively. The FAR and FRR are defined as below: Equal error rate (EER) where FAR = FRR.

25 Image Acquisition (a) Hand geometry sensing device (b) Incorrect placement of hand The ve pegs serve as control points for appropriate placement of the right hand of the user.

26 A Typical System Hand Shape Identification System (Biometric Systems Lab, University of Bologna, Italy.) extracts 17 geometric features from the hand ( finger length and widths, hand width and height, ...).

27 A Typical System

28 A Typical System The experimental studies on a sample of 800 images (100 people, 8 images for each one) The main characteristics of HaSIS are as follows: FAR = 0.57 % FRR = 0.68 % verification time = 0.5 sec. enrollment time = 1.5 sec.

29 Access Control through Hand Geometry (Purdue Univ.)

30 Useful Links Biometric Systems Lab, Univ. of Bologna, Italy.
Biometric Research Center, Hong Kong Biometric Lab, Purdue Univ. Biometric Research, MSU

31 References Goh Kah Ong Michael, AUTOMATED HAND GEOMETRY VERIFICATION SYSTEM BASE ON SALIENT POINTS. The 3rd ISCIT. Arun Ross, A Prototype Hand Geometry-based Verification System, IEEE Trans. PAMI, vol. 19, no7. Paul,S etc, Biometric Identification through Hand Geometry Measurements. IEEE Trans, PAMI Vol 22, No. 10,2002


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