Integrating Faces, Fingerprints, and Soft Biometric Traits for User Recognition
Abstract
Soft biometric traits like gender, age, height, weight, ethnicity, and eye color cannot provide reliable user recognition because they are not distinctive and permanent. However, such ancillary information can complement the identity information provided by the primary biometric traits (face, fingerprint, hand-geometry, iris, etc.). This paper describes a hybrid biometric system that uses face and fingerprint as the primary characteristics and gender, ethnicity, and height as the soft characteristics. We have studied the effect of the soft biometric traits on the recognition performance of unimodal face and fingerprint recognition systems and a multimodal system that uses both the primary traits. Experiments conducted on a database of 263 users show that the recognition performance of the primary biometric system can be improved significantly by making use of soft biometric information. The results also indicate that such a performance improvement can be achieved only if the soft biometric traits are complementary to the primary biometric traits.
Cite
Text
Jain et al. "Integrating Faces, Fingerprints, and Soft Biometric Traits for User Recognition." European Conference on Computer Vision, 2004. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-25976-3_24Markdown
[Jain et al. "Integrating Faces, Fingerprints, and Soft Biometric Traits for User Recognition." European Conference on Computer Vision, 2004.](https://mlanthology.org/eccv/2004/jain2004eccv-integrating/) doi:10.1007/978-3-540-25976-3_24BibTeX
@inproceedings{jain2004eccv-integrating,
title = {{Integrating Faces, Fingerprints, and Soft Biometric Traits for User Recognition}},
author = {Jain, Anil K. and Nandakumar, Karthik and Lu, Xiaoguang and Park, Unsang},
booktitle = {European Conference on Computer Vision},
year = {2004},
pages = {259-269},
doi = {10.1007/978-3-540-25976-3_24},
url = {https://mlanthology.org/eccv/2004/jain2004eccv-integrating/}
}