HomeTechnologyArtificial IntelligenceBlurred Lines in Face Recognition

    Blurred Lines in Face Recognition

    Face recognition has come on apace from a cliched trope of science fiction to a reality of the modern world with widespread use in photography databases, social media, and the security world. However, as with any tool, there are those who would abuse it for nefarious ends. New research published in the International Journal of Biometrics investigates one such aspect of face recognition where a third party might “spoof” the face of a legitimate user to gain access to systems and services to which they are not entitled and offers a suggestion as to how such spoofing might be detected.

    Sandeep Kumar, Sukhwinder Singh, and Jagdish Kumar of the Punjab Engineering College in Chandigarh, India, explain how biometrics, including face recognition, has come to the forefront of security in all sorts of realms from the simple accessing of a person’s smartphone to securing sensitive premises. The key to precluding face recognition spoofing lies in the determination of whether the face being presented to the security camera or device is “live” or a static photograph or video rather than the actual person.

    The team has turned to an improved SegNet-based architecture that can measure “blur” on the basis of local minimum and maximum left and right edges and calculate blur of horizontal and vertical edges. A flat image such as a photograph or video display presented to a security camera or device would be wholly in focus whereas “depth-of-field” comes into play. With a three-dimensional object, such as a real face, presented to the camera, the eyes would be sharply in focus assuming the camera focused on that part of the face, but the curved sides of the head would be slightly out of focus because they are not in the same plane relative to the camera lens as the eyes. Regardless, it is technically impossible for the whole of a three-dimensional object presented to a camera to be in focus, detecting the blur of parts of the object in front of or behind the focal plane is key to discerning whether a real face is in front of the camera or a flat image.

    The team’s proof of principle offers up to 97 percent accuracy, which is an improvement on earlier algorithms when tested against standard benchmarks. Moreover, it can determine the “liveness” of a presented face within about one second. The researchers are now working on improving their system’s speculation abilities by looking at shading, another characteristic of a real face that is is obvious to a person looking at a face but difficult for a computer to detect via a camera.

    ELE Times Bureau
    ELE Times Bureauhttps://www.eletimes.ai/
    ELE Times provides a comprehensive global coverage of Electronics, Technology and the Market. In addition to providing in depth articles, ELE Times attracts the industry’s largest, qualified and highly engaged audiences, who appreciate our timely, relevant content and popular formats. ELE Times helps you build awareness, drive traffic, communicate your offerings to right audience, generate leads and sell your products better.

    Related News

    Must Read

    Renesas Expands Sensing Portfolio with 3 Magnet-Free IPS ICs & Web-Based Design Tool

    New Simulation & Optimization Platform Enables Custom Coil Designs...

    IEEE IEDM, 2025 Showcases Latest Technologies in Microelectronics, Themed “100 Years of FETs”

    The IEEE International Electron Devices Meeting (IEDM) is considered...

    OMNIVISION Introduces Next-Generation 8-MP Image Sensor For Exterior Automotive Cameras

    OMNIVISION announced its latest-generation automotive image sensor: the OX08D20, 8-megapixel (MP) CMOS...

    Vishay Intertechnology Expands Inductor Portfolio with 2000+ New SKUs and Increased Capacity

    Vishay Intertechnology, Inc. announced that it has successfully delivered...

    Keysight to Demonstrate AI-enabled 6G and Wireless Technologies at India Mobile Congress 2025

    Keysight Technologies will demonstrate 20 advanced AI-enabled 6G and...

    Ashwini Vaishnaw Approves NaMo Semiconductor Lab at IIT Bhubaneswar

    As part of a big push towards the development...

    Electric Mobility Drives India’s Power Electronics Expansion

    India is on the verge of an electric revolution....

    India Targets 40% Local Value Addition in Electronics with New Component Scheme

    India's electronics manufacturing landscape is set for a major...