Polarization imaging for face spoofing detection: identification of black ethnical group

Recently, several studies have shown the ability of polarized light as one of the face spoofing countermeasures. In this paper, polarized light is used to identify genuine human user from black ethnical skin color. Printed photos are used as spoofing attacks. Then, the Stokes parameters are applie...

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Main Authors: Abd Aziz, A.Z., Wei, H.
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/1611/1/FH03-FIK-18-16077.pdf
http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/1611/2/FH03-FIK-18-17597.pdf
http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/1611/
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spelling my-unisza-ir.16112020-11-18T08:38:44Z http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/1611/ Polarization imaging for face spoofing detection: identification of black ethnical group Abd Aziz, A.Z. Wei, H. QA75 Electronic computers. Computer science T Technology (General) TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) Recently, several studies have shown the ability of polarized light as one of the face spoofing countermeasures. In this paper, polarized light is used to identify genuine human user from black ethnical skin color. Printed photos are used as spoofing attacks. Then, the Stokes parameters are applied to generate I image for each genuine face and printed photo. Visually, the I of genuine black users seem brighter than the other skin colors. The mean intensity has erroneously classified all the I images of black skins as photo faces. Coarsely comparing I histograms of black skin and printed photos shows that data distributions between the black skin and printed photo are relatively similar. The bimodality coefficient (BC) algorithm is then applied to study the distributions modality. Surprisingly, the BC has been able to identify these genuine black skin group well, but fails to other ethnical groups. A newly proposed fusion formula which is named as the Mean-BC (MBC) has achieved higher detection accuracy rate and can be a robust face spoofing detection measure for polarized database consists of various ethnical groups. 2018 Conference or Workshop Item NonPeerReviewed text en http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/1611/1/FH03-FIK-18-16077.pdf text en http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/1611/2/FH03-FIK-18-17597.pdf Abd Aziz, A.Z. and Wei, H. (2018) Polarization imaging for face spoofing detection: identification of black ethnical group. In: ICASSDA 2018, 15-17 Aug 2018, Kuching, Sarawak, Malaysia.
institution Universiti Sultan Zainal Abidin
building UNISZA Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Sultan Zainal Abidin
content_source UNISZA Institutional Repository
url_provider https://eprints.unisza.edu.my/
language English
English
topic QA75 Electronic computers. Computer science
T Technology (General)
TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)
spellingShingle QA75 Electronic computers. Computer science
T Technology (General)
TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)
Abd Aziz, A.Z.
Wei, H.
Polarization imaging for face spoofing detection: identification of black ethnical group
description Recently, several studies have shown the ability of polarized light as one of the face spoofing countermeasures. In this paper, polarized light is used to identify genuine human user from black ethnical skin color. Printed photos are used as spoofing attacks. Then, the Stokes parameters are applied to generate I image for each genuine face and printed photo. Visually, the I of genuine black users seem brighter than the other skin colors. The mean intensity has erroneously classified all the I images of black skins as photo faces. Coarsely comparing I histograms of black skin and printed photos shows that data distributions between the black skin and printed photo are relatively similar. The bimodality coefficient (BC) algorithm is then applied to study the distributions modality. Surprisingly, the BC has been able to identify these genuine black skin group well, but fails to other ethnical groups. A newly proposed fusion formula which is named as the Mean-BC (MBC) has achieved higher detection accuracy rate and can be a robust face spoofing detection measure for polarized database consists of various ethnical groups.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Abd Aziz, A.Z.
Wei, H.
author_facet Abd Aziz, A.Z.
Wei, H.
author_sort Abd Aziz, A.Z.
title Polarization imaging for face spoofing detection: identification of black ethnical group
title_short Polarization imaging for face spoofing detection: identification of black ethnical group
title_full Polarization imaging for face spoofing detection: identification of black ethnical group
title_fullStr Polarization imaging for face spoofing detection: identification of black ethnical group
title_full_unstemmed Polarization imaging for face spoofing detection: identification of black ethnical group
title_sort polarization imaging for face spoofing detection: identification of black ethnical group
publishDate 2018
url http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/1611/1/FH03-FIK-18-16077.pdf
http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/1611/2/FH03-FIK-18-17597.pdf
http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/1611/
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score 13.211869