Alle Storys
Folgen
Keine Story von A4Vision Inc. mehr verpassen.

A4Vision Inc.

A4Vision, ID Technology Partners, Logitech, Motorola, Oracle, and Unisys Promote International Biometrics Standard for 3D Facial Recognition

Washington (ots/PRNewswire)

  • New Standard Set to Drive Adoption of 3D Facial Imaging in New Applications for Global Deployment
  • ANSI/M1 Standards Committee Adopts 3d Facial Standards From A4Vision & Alliance
A4Vision announced today that its proposal to amend the existing
US national standard for Face Recognition Format and Data Interchange
to include 3D facial image data has been supported and co-sponsored
by an impressive alliance, including ID Technology Partners,
Logitech, Motorola, Oracle, and Unisys Corporation. The alliance,
eager to see a standard for 3D facial recognition, formed quickly to
support A4Vision's amendment, because it facilitates adoption of 3D
face recognition for the broad market. The proposal was submitted to
the M1 Committee on Biometrics, a technical committee of the
International Committee for Information Technology Standards
(INCITS). INCITS is accredited by the American National Standards
Institute (ANSI) to develop US standards and represent the United
States in international standardization activities in the area of
information technology.
The ANSI M1 committee voted in favour of the alliance and adopted
A4Vision's proposal to amend the existing US standard and submit the
proposal on behalf of the US National Body to the International
Standard Organization (ISO/IEC JTC 1 /SC37/WG3) for acceptance as an
amendment to the corresponding international standard. A4Vision CTO
Artiom Yukhin and Identix CTO Paul Griffin were nominated as
co-editors of the amendment.
Among other things, the proposed standard provides vendors with
instructions for storing a high-resolution 3D facial image in a 3-5
KB record without any compression loss, at 0.1 mm precision. 3D
facial imaging provides state of the art in identification methods,
in that it addresses 3D imaging in the context of state of the art
identification methods used in forensics and law enforcement --
anthropometry and arthroscopy. Facial Feature Point data is a
component of these methods; the proposed amendment includes Facial
Feature Point data, so vendors can store so-called anthropometric
landmarks, or facial data points. Facial Feature Point data is
currently used by forensic and law enforcement experts to find
missing people in databases or compare human remains to life images
of missing people.
Vendors equipped with Facial Feature Point data can use CBIR
(Content Based Information Retrieval) types of applications, like
extensible indexing features from Oracle(R) Database, for example.
Filtering and fast searching of big databases, using human language
queries based on the facial appearance descriptions, become possible.
For example, a query of, "Show all males with long noses, closely
placed eyes and oval shaped faces" will produce a list of subjects
fitting the criteria. Also, Facial Feature Point data is compatible
with the existing MPEG-4 standard, already widely deployed among
vendors.
The proposed standard opens new fields of applications for vendors
to incorporate 3D face recognition technology easily in new products
and applications, such as electronic cards that might be used as
e-passports (MRTD- Machine Readable Transport Documents), and any
application where an accurate facial image stored in a small record
is valuable or enabling. Complementing 2D imaging capabilities, 3D
accommodates motion, variable light conditions, and adds depth --
another field of measurement that enhances accuracy.
The new standard wisely and uniquely builds on existing standards,
so vendors can quickly respond and adopt 3D facial recognition, a key
factor in the alliance's enthusiasm. The proposed standard is
designed to equip vendors with consistent and precise design
information to apply 3D facial biometric imaging in their products
and allow reliable data exchange with other vendors to enable
interoperability. Though 3D facial biometrics offers advantages in
accuracy and precision over 2D methods, only a formula reservation
had been included in the existing standard. A4Vision's amendment
completes the standard's specifications for 3D facial imaging.
"Because 3D hasn't been defined for vendor implementation,
adoption of 3Dfacial imaging has been impeded. Though the past 12
months have seen global interest in 3D face recognition technology
for security applications and in models which use 3D information with
traditional 2D images or photos to achieve greater accuracy, lack of
standards has delayed potential growth," said A4Vision CTO Artiom
Yukhin, who developed the original proposal. "A4Vision's submission
of 3D data to amend the 2D standard recently released will drive
greater and faster adoption of 3D facial imaging. We can expect to
see many new vendors participating with new applications, especially
for border control and immigration."
"We endorse the addition of 3D facial data to the ANSI M1
Standard, and we look forward to future international acceptance in
the International Standard Organization's SC37 standard," said Darrin
Reilly, Motorola Communications and Electronics, Inc. vice president
and general manager, Biometrics Business Unit.
"We anticipate that the proposed changes to the US and
international facial recognition standards will bring about many
needed security authentication applications. We are especially
pleased that the proposed capability builds on existing standards. We
look forward to working within INCITS M1 to rapidly progress 3D
facial recognition technology to ANSI and international standards
status," said Donald Deutsch, vice president of Standards Strategy
and Architecture, Oracle.
"The performance of face recognition technology has taken giant
strides since it was brought into the spotlight following the events
of 9/11," said Ed Schaffner, director of Positive Identification and
Access Control programs at Unisys. "While standards have evolved for
2D face recognition and other biometrics to support interoperability,
the performance of 3D technology has reached the point where it can
match and will potentially exceed the performance of its 2D
counterparts, yet no standard exists to exchange data between
vendors. Establishing a standard will enhance development efforts
across the board and result in even greater performance in the
future. It will also provide the flexibility for customers to choose
the solution that is the best fit for their business needs and
operational environment without being locked into one product for the
life of the system."
The ISO committee for biometrics SC37 will meet in June at which
time the proposed standard for 3D facial imaging will be discussed
for inclusion in the international standard. For further information
about the alliance or the proposed standard, interested parties may
send email queries to:  3dstandards@a4vision.com
ABOUT A4Vision(TM)
A4Vision (Applications for Vision) develops and licenses advanced
identification systems and tracking solutions using 3D facial imaging
and recognition technology.
A4Vision is headquartered in California (USA) with offices in
Geneva(Switzerland) and Moscow (Russia).
Web site: http://www.a4vision.com

Contact:

Suzanne Matick, Media Relations of A4Vision, +1-831-479-1888, or
SMATICK@earthlink.net