Empirical Studies of the Existence of the Biometric Menagerie in the FRGC 2.0 Color Image Corpus
Abstract
The issue of recognizability of subjects in biometric identification is of particular interest to the designers of these systems. We have applied the concept of Doddington's biometric menagerie to the area of facial recognition. We performed a series of tests for the presence of goats, lambs, and wolves on FRGC 2.0 color image data. The data for the subjects that appeared at the extreme end of these tests was then visually examined. Even a cursory comparison of images showed that for this set of data, some images fell into the defined menagerie categories. Our tests show the statistical existence of these animal classifications within the constraints of this set of FRGC 2.0 data using the baseline matching algorithm. Ultimately, these tests were limited by the image data set and matching algorithm used. For further confirmation of the existence of the menagerie, the analysis must be expanded to include different image sets and matching algorithms..
Cite
Text
Wittman et al. "Empirical Studies of the Existence of the Biometric Menagerie in the FRGC 2.0 Color Image Corpus." IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Workshops, 2006. doi:10.1109/CVPRW.2006.71Markdown
[Wittman et al. "Empirical Studies of the Existence of the Biometric Menagerie in the FRGC 2.0 Color Image Corpus." IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Workshops, 2006.](https://mlanthology.org/cvprw/2006/wittman2006cvprw-empirical/) doi:10.1109/CVPRW.2006.71BibTeX
@inproceedings{wittman2006cvprw-empirical,
title = {{Empirical Studies of the Existence of the Biometric Menagerie in the FRGC 2.0 Color Image Corpus}},
author = {Wittman, Michael and Davis, P. and Flynn, Patrick J.},
booktitle = {IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Workshops},
year = {2006},
pages = {33},
doi = {10.1109/CVPRW.2006.71},
url = {https://mlanthology.org/cvprw/2006/wittman2006cvprw-empirical/}
}