Benchmarking Quality-Dependent and Cost-Sensitive Score-Level Multimodal Biometric Fusion Algorithms

被引:51
作者
Poh, Norman [2 ]
Bourlai, Thirimachos [1 ]
Kittler, Josef [2 ]
Allano, Lorene
Alonso-Fernandez, Fernando [4 ]
Ambekar, Onkar [5 ]
Baker, John [6 ]
Dorizzi, Bernadette [3 ]
Fatukasi, Omolara [2 ]
Fierrez, Julian [4 ]
Ganster, Harald [7 ]
Ortega-Garcia, Javier [4 ]
Maurer, Donald [6 ]
Salah, Albert Ali [8 ]
Scheidat, Tobias [9 ]
Vielhauer, Claus [10 ]
机构
[1] W Virginia Univ, Coll Engn & Mineral Resources, Lane Dept Comp Sci & Elect Engn, Biometr Ctr, Morgantown, WV 26506 USA
[2] Univ Surrey, Sch Elect & Phys Sci, Ctr Vis Speech & Signal Proc, Guildford GU2 7XH, Surrey, England
[3] Inst Telecom Telecom & Management SudParis, Elect & Phys Dept, F-91011 Evry, France
[4] Univ Autonoma Madrid, Escuela Politecn Super, Biometr Recognit Grp ATVS, Madrid 28049, Spain
[5] CWI, NL-1098 XG Amsterdam, Netherlands
[6] Johns Hopkins Univ, Appl Phys Lab, Laurel, MD 20723 USA
[7] Inst Digital Image Proc, A-8010 Graz, Austria
[8] Univ Amsterdam, ISIS, ISLA, NL-1098 XG Amsterdam, Netherlands
[9] Brandenburg Univ Appl Sci, Dept Informat & Media, IT Secur, D-14770 Brandenburg, Germany
[10] Otto VonGuericke Univ Magdegurg, Fac Comp Sci, Res Grp Multimedia & Secur, Dept Tech & Business Informat Syst, D-39106 Magdeburg, Germany
基金
瑞士国家科学基金会;
关键词
Biometric database; cost-sensitive fusion; multimodal biometric authentication; quality-based fusion; EXPERTS;
D O I
10.1109/TIFS.2009.2034885
中图分类号
TP301 [理论、方法];
学科分类号
081202 ;
摘要
Automatically verifying the identity of a person by means of biometrics (e.g., face and fingerprint) is an important application in our day-to-day activities such as accessing banking services and security control in airports. To increase the system reliability, several biometric devices are often used. Such a combined system is known as a multimodal biometric system. This paper reports a benchmarking study carried out within the framework of the BioSecure DS2 (Access Control) evaluation campaign organized by the University of Surrey, involving face, fingerprint, and iris biometrics for person authentication, targeting the application of physical access control in a medium-size establishment with some 500 persons. While multimodal biometrics is a well-investigated subject in the literature, there exists no benchmark for a fusion algorithm comparison. Working towards this goal, we designed two sets of experiments: quality-dependent and cost-sensitive evaluation. The quality-dependent evaluation aims at assessing how well fusion algorithms can perform under changing quality of raw biometric images principally due to change of devices. The cost-sensitive evaluation, on the other hand, investigates how well a fusion algorithm can perform given restricted computation and in the presence of software and hardware failures, resulting in errors such as failure-to-acquire and failure-to-match. Since multiple capturing devices are available, a fusion algorithm should be able to handle this nonideal but nevertheless realistic scenario. In both evaluations, each fusion algorithm is provided with scores from each biometric comparison subsystem as well as the quality measures of both the template and the query data. The response to the call of the evaluation campaign proved very encouraging, with the submission of 22 fusion systems. To the best of our knowledge, this campaign is the first attempt to benchmark quality-based multimodal fusion algorithms. In the presence of changing image quality which may be due to a change of acquisition devices and/or device capturing configurations, we observe that the top performing fusion algorithms are those that exploit automatically derived quality measurements. Our evaluation also suggests that while using all the available biometric sensors can definitely increase the fusion performance, this comes at the expense of increased cost in terms of acquisition time, computation time, the physical cost of hardware, and its maintenance cost. As demonstrated in our experiments, a promising solution which minimizes the composite cost is sequential fusion, where a fusion algorithm sequentially uses match scores until a desired confidence is reached, or until all the match scores are exhausted, before outputting the final combined score.
引用
收藏
页码:849 / 866
页数:18
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