minutiae
Reviews: Feature selection in functional data classification with recursive maxima hunting
First let me say that while I know feature selection well, I haven't had the opportunity to read a lot of papers about functional feature selection. Therefore my background here is limited in terms of references. The paper is well organized and clear, in my opinion even though ironically wrt the contents it has a few redundancies - but that's fine. The experiments seem to be carried out thoroughly with one exception as the authors note themselves: the parameters s and r seem to be chosen a little arbitrarily and in my opinion more values of those should have been included in the cross validation procedure. It is also not very clear whether these values are fixed or not during the experiments on real data.
Latent fingerprint enhancement for accurate minutiae detection
Wahab, Abdul, Khan, Tariq Mahmood, Iqbal, Shahzaib, AlShammari, Bandar, Alhaqbani, Bandar, Razzak, Imran
Identification of suspects based on partial and smudged fingerprints, commonly referred to as fingermarks or latent fingerprints, presents a significant challenge in the field of fingerprint recognition. Although fixed-length embeddings have shown effectiveness in recognising rolled and slap fingerprints, the methods for matching latent fingerprints have primarily centred around local minutiae-based embeddings, failing to fully exploit global representations for matching purposes. Consequently, enhancing latent fingerprints becomes critical to ensuring robust identification for forensic investigations. Current approaches often prioritise restoring ridge patterns, overlooking the fine-macroeconomic details crucial for accurate fingerprint recognition. To address this, we propose a novel approach that uses generative adversary networks (GANs) to redefine Latent Fingerprint Enhancement (LFE) through a structured approach to fingerprint generation. By directly optimising the minutiae information during the generation process, the model produces enhanced latent fingerprints that exhibit exceptional fidelity to ground-truth instances. This leads to a significant improvement in identification performance. Our framework integrates minutiae locations and orientation fields, ensuring the preservation of both local and structural fingerprint features. Extensive evaluations conducted on two publicly available datasets demonstrate our method's dominance over existing state-of-the-art techniques, highlighting its potential to significantly enhance latent fingerprint recognition accuracy in forensic applications.
- North America > United States (0.68)
- Asia > Pakistan > Islamabad Capital Territory > Islamabad (0.04)
- Asia > Middle East > Saudi Arabia > Riyadh Province > Riyadh (0.04)
- (2 more...)
- Health & Medicine (0.94)
- Law (0.93)
- Information Technology > Security & Privacy (0.68)
- (2 more...)
A Robust Algorithm for Contactless Fingerprint Enhancement and Matching
Siddiqui, Mahrukh, Iqbal, Shahzaib, AlShammari, Bandar, Alhaqbani, Bandar, Khan, Tariq M., Razzak, Imran
Compared to contact fingerprint images, contactless fingerprint images exhibit four distinct characteristics: (1) they contain less noise; (2) they have fewer discontinuities in ridge patterns; (3) the ridge-valley pattern is less distinct; and (4) they pose an interoperability problem, as they lack the elastic deformation caused by pressing the finger against the capture device. These properties present significant challenges for the enhancement of contactless fingerprint images. In this study, we propose a novel contactless fingerprint identification solution that enhances the accuracy of minutiae detection through improved frequency estimation and a new region-quality-based minutia extraction algorithm. In addition, we introduce an efficient and highly accurate minutiae-based encoding and matching algorithm. We validate the effectiveness of our approach through extensive experimental testing. Our method achieves a minimum Equal Error Rate (EER) of 2.84\% on the PolyU contactless fingerprint dataset, demonstrating its superior performance compared to existing state-of-the-art techniques. The proposed fingerprint identification method exhibits notable precision and resilience, proving to be an effective and feasible solution for contactless fingerprint-based identification systems.
- Asia > Pakistan > Islamabad Capital Territory > Islamabad (0.05)
- Oceania > Australia > New South Wales > Sydney (0.04)
- Asia > Middle East > Saudi Arabia > Riyadh Province > Riyadh (0.04)
- Asia > China > Hong Kong (0.04)
- Research Report > New Finding (0.34)
- Research Report > Promising Solution (0.34)
IFViT: Interpretable Fixed-Length Representation for Fingerprint Matching via Vision Transformer
Qiu, Yuhang, Chen, Honghui, Dong, Xingbo, Lin, Zheng, Liao, Iman Yi, Tistarelli, Massimo, Jin, Zhe
Determining dense feature points on fingerprints used in constructing deep fixed-length representations for accurate matching, particularly at the pixel level, is of significant interest. To explore the interpretability of fingerprint matching, we propose a multi-stage interpretable fingerprint matching network, namely Interpretable Fixed-length Representation for Fingerprint Matching via Vision Transformer (IFViT), which consists of two primary modules. The first module, an interpretable dense registration module, establishes a Vision Transformer (ViT)-based Siamese Network to capture long-range dependencies and the global context in fingerprint pairs. It provides interpretable dense pixel-wise correspondences of feature points for fingerprint alignment and enhances the interpretability in the subsequent matching stage. The second module takes into account both local and global representations of the aligned fingerprint pair to achieve an interpretable fixed-length representation extraction and matching. It employs the ViTs trained in the first module with the additional fully connected layer and retrains them to simultaneously produce the discriminative fixed-length representation and interpretable dense pixel-wise correspondences of feature points. Extensive experimental results on diverse publicly available fingerprint databases demonstrate that the proposed framework not only exhibits superior performance on dense registration and matching but also significantly promotes the interpretability in deep fixed-length representations-based fingerprint matching.
- Asia > Malaysia (0.04)
- Asia > China > Hong Kong (0.04)
- Asia > China > Fujian Province > Fuzhou (0.04)
- (4 more...)
Latent Fingerprint Recognition: Fusion of Local and Global Embeddings
Grosz, Steven A., Jain, Anil K.
One of the most challenging problems in fingerprint recognition continues to be establishing the identity of a suspect associated with partial and smudgy fingerprints left at a crime scene (i.e., latent prints or fingermarks). Despite the success of fixed-length embeddings for rolled and slap fingerprint recognition, the features learned for latent fingerprint matching have mostly been limited to local minutiae-based embeddings and have not directly leveraged global representations for matching. In this paper, we combine global embeddings with local embeddings for state-of-the-art latent to rolled matching accuracy with high throughput. The combination of both local and global representations leads to improved recognition accuracy across NIST SD 27, NIST SD 302, MSP, MOLF DB1/DB4, and MOLF DB2/DB4 latent fingerprint datasets for both closed-set (84.11%, 54.36%, 84.35%, 70.43%, 62.86% rank-1 retrieval rate, respectively) and open-set (0.50, 0.74, 0.44, 0.60, 0.68 FNIR at FPIR=0.02, respectively) identification scenarios on a gallery of 100K rolled fingerprints. Not only do we fuse the complimentary representations, we also use the local features to guide the global representations to focus on discriminatory regions in two fingerprint images to be compared. This leads to a multi-stage matching paradigm in which subsets of the retrieved candidate lists for each probe image are passed to subsequent stages for further processing, resulting in a considerable reduction in latency (requiring just 0.068 ms per latent to rolled comparison on a AMD EPYC 7543 32-Core Processor, roughly 15K comparisons per second). Finally, we show the generalizability of the fused representations for improving authentication accuracy across several rolled, plain, and contactless fingerprint datasets.
- North America > United States > Michigan > Ingham County > Lansing (0.14)
- North America > United States > Michigan > Ingham County > East Lansing (0.14)
- North America > United States > West Virginia > Marion County > Fairmont (0.04)
- North America > United States > Maryland > Montgomery County > Gaithersburg (0.04)
FIGO: Enhanced Fingerprint Identification Approach Using GAN and One Shot Learning Techniques
Yilmaz, Ibrahim, Abouyoussef, Mahmoud
Fingerprint evidence plays an important role in a criminal investigation for the identification of individuals. Although various techniques have been proposed for fingerprint classification and feature extraction, automated fingerprint identification of fingerprints is still in its earliest stage. The performance of traditional \textit{Automatic Fingerprint Identification System} (AFIS) depends on the presence of valid minutiae points and still requires human expert assistance in feature extraction and identification stages. Based on this motivation, we propose a Fingerprint Identification approach based on Generative adversarial network and One-shot learning techniques (FIGO). Our solution contains two components: fingerprint enhancement tier and fingerprint identification tier. First, we propose a Pix2Pix model to transform low-quality fingerprint images to a higher level of fingerprint images pixel by pixel directly in the fingerprint enhancement tier. With the proposed enhancement algorithm, the fingerprint identification model's performance is significantly improved. Furthermore, we develop another existing solution based on Gabor filters as a benchmark to compare with the proposed model by observing the fingerprint device's recognition accuracy. Experimental results show that our proposed Pix2pix model has better support than the baseline approach for fingerprint identification. Second, we construct a fully automated fingerprint feature extraction model using a one-shot learning approach to differentiate each fingerprint from the others in the fingerprint identification process. Two twin convolutional neural networks (CNNs) with shared weights and parameters are used to obtain the feature vectors in this process. Using the proposed method, we demonstrate that it is possible to learn necessary information from only one training sample with high accuracy.
- North America > United States > Arkansas > Faulkner County > Conway (0.14)
- North America > United States > Tennessee > Putnam County > Cookeville (0.04)
- Europe > Moldova > Bălți > Bălți (0.04)
Evaluation of Rarity of Fingerprints in Forensics
A method for computing the rarity of latent fingerprints represented by minutiae is given. It allows determining the probability of finding a match for an evidence print in a database of n known prints. The probability of random correspondence between evidence and database is determined in three procedural steps. In the registration step the latent print is aligned by finding its core point; which is done using a procedure based on a machine learning approach based on Gaussian processes. In the evidence probability evaluation step a generative model based on Bayesian networks is used to determine the probability of the evidence; it takes into account both the dependency of each minutia on nearby minutiae and the confidence of their presence in the evidence.
Evaluation of Rarity of Fingerprints in Forensics
A method for computing the rarity of latent fingerprints represented by minutiae is given. It allows determining the probability of finding a match for an evidence print in a database of n known prints. The probability of random correspondence between evidence and database is determined in three procedural steps. In the registration step the latent print is aligned by finding its core point; which is done using a procedure based on a machine learning approach based on Gaussian processes. In the evidence probability evaluation step a generative model based on Bayesian networks is used to determine the probability of the evidence; it takes into account both the dependency of each minutia on nearby minutiae and the confidence of their presence in the evidence.
Persistent homology machine learning for fingerprint classification
Giansiracusa, Noah, Giansiracusa, Robert, Moon, Chul
The fingerprint classification problem is to sort fingerprints into pre-determined groups, such as arch, loop, and whorl. It was asserted in the literature that minutiae points, which are commonly used for fingerprint matching, are not useful for classification. We show that, to the contrary, near state-of-the-art classification accuracy rates can be achieved when applying topological data analysis (TDA) to 3-dimensional point clouds of oriented minutiae points. We also apply TDA to fingerprint ink-roll images, which yields a lower accuracy rate but still shows promise, particularly since the only preprocessing is cropping; moreover, combining the two approaches outperforms each one individually. These methods use supervised learning applied to persistent homology and allow us to explore feature selection on barcodes, an important topic at the interface between TDA and machine learning. We test our classification algorithms on the NIST fingerprint database SD-27.
- North America > United States > Rhode Island > Providence County > Providence (0.05)
- North America > United States > New York > New York County > New York City (0.04)
- Europe > United Kingdom > England > Cambridgeshire > Cambridge (0.04)
- Research Report (0.64)
- Workflow (0.46)
High-Resolution Mobile Fingerprint Matching via Deep Joint KNN-Triplet Embedding
Zhang, Fandong (Peking University) | Feng, Jufu (Peking University)
In mobile devices, the limited area of fingerprint sensors brings demand of partial fingerprint matching. Existing fingerprint authentication algorithms are mainly based on minutiae matching. However, their accuracy degrades significantly for partial-to-partial matching due to the lack of minutiae. Optical fingerprint sensor can capture very high-resolution fingerprints (2000dpi) with rich details as pores, scars, etc. These details can cover the shortage of minutiae insufficiency. In this paper, we propose a novel matching algorithm for such fingerprints, namely Deep Joint KNN-Triplet Embedding, by making good use of these subtle features. Our model employs a deep convolutional neural network (CNN) with a well-designed joint loss to project raw fingerprint images into an Euclidean space. Then we can use L2-distance to measure the similarity of two fingerprints. Experiments indicate that our model outperforms several state-of-the-art approaches.