Claims
- 1. A currency handling system for processing currency bills, comprising:an input receptacle adapted to receive a stack of bills of a plurality of denominations to be processed; at least one output receptacle adapted to receive the bills after the bills have been processed; a transport mechanism adapted to transport the bills, one at a time, from the input receptacle to the at least one output receptacle; a denominating sensor disposed adjacent to the transport mechanism adapted to retrieve denominating characteristic information from each of the bills; an infrared light source disposed adjacent to the transport mechanism adapted to illuminate a surface of a bill with infrared light; a sensor disposed adjacent to the transport mechanism adapted to optically sample a bill in response to infrared light illumination along a dimension of the bill, the sensor being adapted to produce a signal indicative of samples obtained from the bill; a memory adapted to store a plurality of master authenticating threshold values corresponding to a plurality of denominations and master denominating information; and a processor adapted to receive the output signal from the sensor, the processor adapted to determine a difference sum value for each of the bills, the processor adapted to determine the denomination of each of the bills by comparing the retrieved denominating characteristic information to master denominating information, the processor adapted to determine the authenticity of each of the bills by comparing the difference sum value to a master threshold value corresponding to the determined denomination, wherein the authenticity of the bills is assessed relative to being Mexican 50 Peso notes.
- 2. The currency handling system of claim 1 wherein the sensor is responsive to visible light.
- 3. The currency handling system of claim 1 wherein the sensor is responsive to infrared light.
- 4. The currency handling system of claim 1 wherein the infrared light source has a wavelength between about 850 nanometers and 950 nanometers.
- 5. The currency handling system of claim of claim 4 wherein the wavelength is about 875 nanometers.
- 6. The currency handling system of claim 1 wherein the processor is adapted to produce a suspect document error signal when the determined difference sum value does not favorably compare to the master authenticating threshold value.
- 7. The currency handling system of claim 1 wherein the output signal produced by the sensor in response to infrared light illumination of a document corresponds to optical samples obtained along a dimension of the document, the processor determining the difference sum value based upon at least one range of samples.
- 8. The currency handling system of claim 7 wherein the range of samples comprises the first twelve samples and the last twelve samples obtained along a dimension of a bill.
- 9. The currency handling system of claim 8 wherein the processor is adapted to determine the difference sum value by scaling the samples obtained along a dimension of a bill such that a maximum sample value is set at 1000, averaging a first range of samples, averaging a second range of samples, determining a first sample difference total by summing the difference between each of the samples in the first range of samples and the first sample average, determining a second sample difference total by summing the difference between each of the samples in the second range of samples and the second sample average, and summing the first sample difference total and the second sample difference total.
- 10. A currency handling system for processing currency bills, comprising:an input receptacle adapted to receive a stack of bills to be processed; at least one output receptacle adapted to receive the bills after the bills have been processed; a transport mechanism adapted to transport the bills, one at a time, from the input receptacle to the at least one output receptacle; an infrared light source disposed adjacent to the transport mechanism adapted to illuminate a surface of a bill with infrared light; a sensor disposed adjacent to the transport mechanism adapted to detect a pattern of light received from a surface of the bill in response to infrared light illumination along a dimension of the bill, the sensor adapted to produce a signal indicative of pattern obtained from the bill; a memory adapted to store master authenticating patterns; and a processor adapted to receive the output signal from the sensor, the processor adapted to determine the authenticity of each of the bills by comparing the pattern obtained from a bill to master authenticating patterns, wherein the authenticity of the bills is assessed relative to being Mexican 50 Peso notes.
- 11. The currency handling system of claim 10 wherein the sensor is responsive to visible light.
- 12. The currency handling system of claim 10 wherein the sensor is responsive to infrared light.
- 13. The currency handling system of claim 10 wherein the infrared light source has a wavelength between about 850 nanometers and 950 nanometers.
- 14. The currency handling system of claim 13 wherein the wavelength is about 875 nanometers.
- 15. A method for authenticating currency bills with a currency handling system, the method comprising:receiving a stack of currency bills to be processed in an input receptacle; transporting the bills from the input receptacle, one at a time, past an evaluating unit to at least one output receptacle; illuminating a surface of each of the bills with infrared light as each of the bills are transported past the evaluating unit; sampling the optical characteristics received from a surface of a bill in response to illuminating the surface of the bill with infrared light as each of the bills are transported past the evaluating unit; determining the difference sum value for each of the bills, wherein at least one range of samples obtained from each of the bills is used to determine the difference sum value for each of the bills, wherein the step of determining the difference sum value scaling the samples obtained from the bill such that a maximum sample value is set at, averaging a first range of samples, averaging a second range of samples, determining a first sample difference total by summing the difference between each of the samples in the first range of samples and the first sample average, determining a second sample difference total by summing the difference between each of the samples in the second range of samples and the second sample average, and summing the first sample difference total and the second sample difference total; and comparing the determined difference sum value for each of the bills to a master difference sum value stored in a memory of the currency handling system; and producing a suspect document error signal when the determined difference sum value does not favorably compare to the master difference sum value.
- 16. The method of claim 15 wherein the first range of samples comprises the first twelve samples and the second range of samples comprises the last twelve samples.
- 17. The method of claim 15 wherein illuminating a surface of each of the bills with infrared light further comprises illuminating a surface of each of the bills with infrared light having a wavelength between about 850 nanometers and 950 nanometers.
- 18. The method of claim 17 wherein the wavelength is about 875 nanometers.
- 19. The method of claim 15 wherein sampling the optical characteristics further comprises sampling the infrared light received from a surface of a bill in response to illuminating the surface of the bill with infrared light as each of the bills are transported past the evaluating unit.
- 20. The method of claim 15 wherein sampling the optical characteristics further comprises sampling the visible light received from a surface of a bill in response to illuminating the surface of the bill with infrared light as each of the bills are transported past the evaluating unit.
- 21. The method of claim 15 wherein sampling the optical characteristics further comprises sampling the optical characteristics with a sensor responsive to infrared light.
- 22. The method of claim 15 wherein sampling the optical characteristics further comprises sampling the optical characteristics with a sensor responsive to visible light.
- 23. The method of claim 15 further comprising determining the face orientation of each of the bills, and wherein comparing the determined difference sum value for each of the bills to a master difference sum value stored in a memory of the currency handling system further comprises comparing the determined difference sum value for each of the bills to a master difference sum value corresponding to the determined face orientation of the bill stored in a memory of the currency handling system.
- 24. The method of claim 15 wherein the authenticity of the bills is assessed relative to being Mexican 50 Peso notes.
- 25. The method of claim 15 wherein receiving a stack of currency bills further comprises receiving a stack of currency bills of mixed denominations and wherein comparing the determined difference sum value for each of the bills further comprises comparing the determined difference sum value for each of the bills to a master difference sum value corresponding to a determined denomination, the method further comprising determining the denomination of each of the bills.
- 26. A method for authenticating currency bills with a currency handling system, the method comprising:receiving a stack of currency bills to be processed in an input receptacle; transporting the bills from the input receptacle, one at a time, past an evaluating unit to at least one output receptacle; illuminating a surface of each of the bills with infrared light as each of the bills are transported past the evaluating unit; detecting a pattern of light received from a surface of a bill in response to illuminating the surface of the bill with infrared light as each of the bills are transported past the evaluating unit; comparing the detected pattern of light received from a surface of each of the bills to master authenticating patterns stored in a memory of the currency handling system; and producing a suspect document error signal when the detected pattern of light does not favorably compare to master authenticating patterns, wherein the authenticity of the bill is assessed relative to being Mexican 50 Peso notes.
- 27. The method of claim 26 wherein illuminating a surface of each of the bills with infrared light further comprises illuminating a surface of each of the bills with infrared light having a wavelength between about 850 nanometers and about 950 nanometers.
- 28. The method of claim 27 wherein the wavelength is about 875 nanometers.
- 29. The method of claim 26 wherein detecting a pattern of light further comprises detecting a pattern of infrared light received from a surface of a bill in response to illuminating the surface of the bill with infrared light as each of the bills are transported past the evaluating unit.
- 30. The method of claim 26 wherein detecting a pattern of light further comprises detecting a pattern of visible light received from a surface of a bill in response to illuminating the surface of the bill with infrared light as each of the bills are transported past the evaluating unit.
- 31. The method of claim 26 wherein detecting a pattern of light further comprises detecting a pattern of light with a sensor responsive to infrared light.
- 32. The method of claim 26 wherein detecting a pattern of light further comprises detecting a pattern of light with a sensor responsive to visible light.
- 33. The method of claim 26 further comprising determining the face orientation of each of the bills, and wherein comparing the detected pattern of light further comprises comparing the detected pattern of light to master authenticating patterns corresponding to the determined face orientation of the bill stored in a memory of the currency handling system.
- 34. A currency handling system for processing currency notes, comprising:an input receptacle adapted to receive a stack currency notes to be processed, the stack of currency notes including Mexican 50 Peso notes; at least one output receptacle adapted to receive the notes after the notes have been processed; a transport mechanism adapted to transport the notes, one at a time, from the input receptacle to the at least one output receptacle; a first sensor disposed adjacent to the transport mechanism adapted to retrieve information from each of the notes including denominating characteristic information and face orientation information for each of the notes; an infrared light source disposed adjacent to the transport mechanism adapted to illuminate a surface of a note with infrared light having a wavelength between about 850 nanometers and 950 nanometers; a second sensor disposed adjacent to the transport mechanism adapted to optically sample the infrared light reflected off of the surface of the note in response to infrared light illumination of the surface of the bill along a dimension of the note, the sensor adapted to produce a signal indicative of samples obtained from the note; a memory adapted to store master authenticating threshold values corresponding to a plurality of face orientations of genuine Mexican 50 Peso notes and master denominating characteristic information; and a processor adapted to determine the denomination of each of the notes, the processor adapted to determine the face orientation of each of the notes which are Mexican 50 Peso notes, the processor adapted to determine a difference sum value for each of the Mexican 50 Peso notes, the processor adapted to determine the authenticity of each of the Mexican 50 Peso notes by comparing the determined difference sum value to a master authenticating threshold value corresponding to the determined face orientation of the Mexican 50 Peso note.
- 35. The currency handling system of claim 34 wherein the second sensor is responsive to infrared light.
- 36. The currency handling system of claim 34 wherein the processor is adapted to produce a suspect document error signal when the determined difference sum value does not favorably compare to the master authenticating threshold value corresponding to the determined face orientation of the Mexican 50 Peso note.
- 37. The currency handling system of claim 34 wherein the output signal produced by the second sensor in response to infrared light illumination of a note corresponds to optical samples obtained along a dimension of the note, the processor determining the difference sum value based upon at least one range of samples.
- 38. The currency handling system of claim 37 wherein the range of samples comprises the first twelve samples and the last twelve samples obtained along a dimension of a note.
- 39. The currency handling system of claim 38 wherein the processor is adapted to determine the difference sum value by scaling the samples obtained along a dimension of a note such that a maximum sample value is set at 1000, averaging a first range of samples, averaging a second range of samples, determining a first sample difference total by summing the difference between each of the samples in the first range of samples and the first sample average, determining a second sample difference total by summing the difference between each of the samples in the second range of samples and the first sample average, and summing the first sample difference total and the second first sample difference total.
- 40. The currency handling system of claim 34 wherein the wavelength is about 875 nanometers.
- 41. A method for authenticating currency notes with a currency handling system, the method comprising:receiving a stack of currency bills to be processed in an input receptacle, the stack of currency notes including Mexican 50 Peso notes; transporting the notes from the input receptacle, one at a time, past an evaluating unit to at least one output receptacle; determining the denomination of each of the notes; determining the face orientation of each of the notes which are determined to be Mexican 50 Peso notes; illuminating a surface of each of the notes which are determined to be Mexican 50 Peso notes with infrared light as each of the bills are transported past the evaluating unit, the infrared light having a wavelength of about 875 nanometers; sampling the infrared light reflected off of the surface of each of the notes in response to illuminating the surface of the notes with infrared light along a dimension of the note as each of the bills are transported past the evaluating unit; determining the difference sum value for each of the notes determined to be Mexican 50 Peso notes, wherein the first twelve samples and the last twelve samples are used to determine the difference sum value for each of the notes; comparing the difference sum value for each of the notes determined to be Mexican 50 Peso notes to a master difference sum value corresponding to the determined face orientation stored in a memory of the currency handling system; and producing a suspect document error signal when the determined difference sum value does not favorably compare to the master difference sum value.
- 42. The method of claim 41 wherein sampling further comprises sampling the infrared light with a sensor responsive to infrared light.
- 43. The method of claim 41 wherein the step of determining the difference sum value comprises:scaling the samples obtained from the bill such that a maximum sample value is set at 1000; averaging a the first twelve samples; averaging a second twelve samples; determining a first sample difference total by summing the difference between the first twelve samples and the first sample average; determining a second sample difference total by summing the difference between each of second twelve samples and the second sample average; and summing the first sample difference total and the second sample difference total.
- 44. A method for assessing the authenticity of a currency note relative to being a genuine Mexican 50 Peso note with a currency note validator, the method comprising:illuminating a surface of a note with an infrared light; sampling the optical characteristics received from the surface of the note in response to illuminating the surface the note with infrared light along a dimension of the note; determining the difference sum value for the note, wherein at least one range of samples obtained from the note is used to determine the difference sum value; comparing the determined difference sum value to a master authenticating difference sum value stored in a memory of the currency note validator; and producing a suspect document error signal when the determined difference sum value does not favorably compare to the master authenticating difference sum value.
- 45. The method of claim 44 wherein the step of determining the difference sum value comprises:scaling the samples obtained from the note such that a maximum sample value is set at 1000; averaging a first range of samples; averaging a second range of samples; determining a first sample difference total by summing the difference between each of the samples in the first range of samples and the first sample average; determining a second sample difference total by summing the difference between each of the samples in the second range of samples and the second sample average, and summing the first sample difference total and the second sample difference total.
- 46. The method of claim 45 wherein the first range of samples comprises the first twelve samples and the second range of samples comprises the last twelve samples.
- 47. The method of claim 44 wherein illuminating a surface the note with infrared light further comprises illuminating a surface the note with infrared light having a wavelength between about 850 nanometers and 950 nanometers.
- 48. The method of claim 47 wherein the wavelength is about 875 nanometers.
- 49. The method of claim 44 wherein sampling the optical characteristics further comprises sampling the infrared light received from a surface of a note in response to illuminating the surface of the bill with infrared light.
- 50. The method of claim 44 wherein sampling the optical characteristics further comprises sampling the visible light received from a surface of a note in response to illuminating the surface of the note with infrared light.
- 51. The method of claim 44 wherein sampling the optical characteristics further comprises sampling the optical characteristics with a sensor responsive to infrared light.
- 52. The method of claim 44 wherein sampling the optical characteristics further comprises sampling the optical characteristics with a sensor responsive to visible light.
- 53. The method of claim 44 further comprising determining the face orientation of the note, and wherein comparing the determined difference sum value for the note to a master authenticating difference sum value stored in a memory of the currency note validator further comprises comparing the determined difference sum value for the note to a master authenticating difference sum value corresponding to the determined face orientation of the note stored in a memory of the currency note validator.
- 54. A method for assessing the authenticity of a currency note relative to being a genuine Mexican 50 Peso note with a currency note validator, the method comprising:illuminating a surface of a note with an infrared light; sampling the optical characteristics received from the surface of the note in response to illuminating the surface the note with infrared light along a dimension of the note; determining at least one difference total for the note; comparing the determined difference total to a master authenticating difference total stored in a memory of the currency note validator; and producing a suspect document error signal when the determined difference total does not favorably compare to the master authenticating difference total.
- 55. The method of claim 54 wherein the step of determining the at least one difference total for the note comprises:scaling a range of samples obtained from the bill such that a maximum sample value is set at 1000; averaging the samples within the range of samples; and summing the difference between each of the samples in the range of samples and the average of the samples within the range of samples.
- 56. The method of claim 55 wherein the range of samples comprises the first twelve samples obtained from the note.
- 57. The method of claim 55 wherein the range of samples comprises the last twelve samples obtained from the note.
- 58. The method of claim 54 wherein illuminating a surface of the note with infrared light further comprises illuminating a surface the note with infrared light having a wavelength between about 850 nanometers and 950 nanometers.
- 59. The method of claim 58 wherein the wavelength is about 875 nanometers.
- 60. The method of claim 54 wherein sampling the optical characteristics further comprises sampling the infrared light received from a surface of a note in response to illuminating the surface of the note with infrared light.
- 61. The method of claim 54 wherein sampling the optical characteristics further comprises sampling the visible light received from a surface of a note in response to illuminating the surface of the note with infrared light.
- 62. The method of claim 54 wherein sampling the optical characteristics further comprises sampling the optical characteristics with a sensor responsive to infrared light.
- 63. The method of claim 54 wherein sampling the optical characteristics further comprises sampling the optical characteristics with a sensor responsive to visible light.
- 64. The method of claim 54 further comprising determining the face orientation of each of the note, and wherein comparing the determined difference total for the note to a master authenticating difference total stored in a memory of the currency note validator further comprises comparing the determined difference total for the note to a master authenticating difference total corresponding to the determined face orientation of the note stored in a memory of the currency note validator.
- 65. A currency handling system for processing currency notes, comprising:an input receptacle adapted to receive a stack of currency notes to be processed, the stack of currency notes including Mexican 50 Peso notes; at least one output receptacle adapted to receive the notes after the notes have been processed; a transport mechanism adapted to transport the notes, one at a time, from the input receptacle to the at least one output receptacle; an infrared light source disposed adjacent to the transport mechanism adapted to illuminate a surface of each of the notes with infrared light; a visible light source disposed adjacent to the transport mechanism adapted to illuminate the surface of each of the notes with visible light; a sensor responsive to infrared light disposed adjacent the transport path adapted to optically sample infrared light reflected off of the surface of each of the notes in response to infrared illumination of the surface of the note; a sensor responsive to visible light disposed adjacent the transport path adapted to optically sample the visible light reflected off of the surface of each of the notes in response to visible-light illumination of the surface of the note; a memory adapted to store a plurality of threshold values corresponding to a plurality of authentication sensitivities; and a processor adapted to determine the denomination of each of the notes, the processor being adapted to determine a correlation value between the visible light reflectance samples and the infrared light reflectance samples obtained from each note determined to be a Mexican 50 peso note, the processor being adapted to authenticate each of notes determined to be Mexican 50 Peso notes by comparing the determined coloration value to a threshold value stored in the memory, the processor being adapted to generate a suspect document error signal when the determined coloration value is does not favorably compare to the stored threshold value.
- 66. The currency handing system of claim 65 wherein the processor is adapted to normalize each of the visible light reflectance samples in a rage of samples and to normalize each of the infrared light reflectance samples in a corresponding range of samples, the processor being adapted to determine the correlation value by dividing the sum the product of each of the normalized visible light reflectance samples and each of the normalized infrared light reflectance samples by the number of samples in the range of samples.
- 67. The currency handing system of claim 65 wherein the infrared light source generates infrared light having a wavelength between about 850 nanometers and about 950 nanometers.
- 68. The currency handling system of claim 67 wherein the wavelength is about 875 nanometers.
- 69. A currency handling system for processing currency notes, comprising:an input receptacle adapted to receive a stack of currency notes to be processed; at least one output receptacle adapted to receive the notes after the notes have been processed; a transport mechanism adapted to transport each of the notes, one at a time, from the input receptacle to the at least one output receptacle; an infrared light source disposed adjacent to the transport mechanism adapted to illuminate a surface of each of the notes with infrared light; a visible light source disposed adjacent to the transport mechanism adapted to illuminate the surface of each of the notes with visible light; at least one sensor disposed adjacent to the transport mechanism, the at least one sensor adapted to optically sample infrared light reflected off of the surface of the note in response to infrared light illumination of the surface of the note, the at least one sensor adapted to optically sample the visible light reflected off of the surface of the note in response to visible light illumination of the surface of the note; a memory adapted to store at least one correlation threshold value; and a processor adapted to determine a correlation value between the visible light reflectance samples and the infrared light reflectance samples obtained from each of the notes, the processor being adapted to authenticate each of notes by comparing the determined correlation value to the threshold value stored in the memory, the processor being adapted to generate a suspect document error signal when the determined correlation value does not favorably compare to the stored threshold value.
- 70. The currency handing system of claim 69 wherein the processor is adapted to normalize each of the visible light reflectance samples in a rage of samples and to normalize each of the infrared light reflectance samples in a corresponding range of samples, the processor being adapted to determine the correlation value by dividing the sum the product of each of the normalized visible light reflectance samples and each of the normalized infrared light reflectance samples by the number of samples in the range of samples.
- 71. The currency handling system of claim 69 wherein the authenticity of the notes is assessed relative to being Mexican 50 Peso notes.
- 72. The currency handing system of claim 69 wherein the infrared light source generates infrared light having a wavelength between about 850 nanometers and about 950 nanometers.
- 73. The currency handling system of claim 72 wherein the wavelength is about 875 nanometers.
- 74. The currency handling system of claim 69 wherein the at least one sensor further comprises:a first sensor adapted to optically sample infrared light; and a second adapted to optically sample visible light.
- 75. The currency handling system of claim 69 further comprising a denomination sensor adapted to retrieve denominating characteristic information from each of the notes, and wherein the memory is adapted to store master denominating characteristic information and the processor is adapted to determine the denomination of each of the notes by comparing the stored master denominating characteristic information to characteristic denominating information retrieved from each of the notes.
- 76. A method for authenticating currency notes with a currency handling system, the method comprising:receiving a stack of currency notes to be processed in an input receptacles, the stack of currency notes including Mexican 50 Peso notes; transporting the notes from the input receptacles, one at a time, past an evaluating unit to at least one output receptacle; determining the denomination of each of the notes; illuminating a surface of each of the notes which are determined to be Mexican 50 Peso notes with infrared light as each of the notes are transported past the evaluating unit; illuminating a surface of each of the notes which are determined to be Mexican 50 Peso notes with visible light as each of the notes are transported past the evaluating unit; sampling the infrared light reflected off of the surface of each of the notes in response to illuminating the surface of the notes with infrared light as each of the notes are transported past the evaluating unit; sampling the visible light reflected off of the surface of each of the notes in response to illuminating the surface of the notes with visible light as each of the notes are transported past the evaluating unit; determining a correlation value between the visible light reflectance samples and the infrared light reflectance samples for each of the notes; comparing the determined correlation value for each of the notes to a master threshold value stored in a memory of the currency handling system; and producing a suspect document error signal when the determined difference total for each of the notes is not less than the master threshold value.
- 77. The method of claim 76 wherein determining a correlation value further comprises:normalizing a rage of visible light reflectance values; normalizing a corresponding range of infrared light reflectance samples; summing the product of each of the normalized visible light reflectance samples and each of the infrared light reflectance samples; and dividing the sum of the products by the number of samples in the range of samples.
- 78. The method of claim 76 wherein the infrared light source generates infrared light having a wavelength between about 850 nanometers and about 950 nanometers.
- 79. The method claim 78 wherein the wavelength is 875 nanometers.
- 80. The method of claim 76 wherein comparing the determined correlation value further comprises comparing the determined correlation value for each of the notes to one of a plurality of threshold values stored in a memory of the currency handling system, the plurality of stored threshold values corresponding to a plurality of authentication sensitivities.
- 81. A method for authenticating currency notes with a currency handling system, the method comprising:receiving a stack of currency notes to be processed in an input receptacles; transporting the notes from the input receptacle, one at a time, past an evaluating unit to at least one output receptacle; illuminating a surface of each of the notes with infrared light as each of the notes are transported past the evaluating unit; illuminating a surface of each of the notes with visible light as each of the notes are transported past the evaluating unit; sampling the infrared light reflected off of the surface of each of the notes in response to illuminating the surface of the notes with infrared light as each of the notes are transported past the evaluating unit; sampling the visible light reflected off of the surface of each of the notes in response to illuminating the surface of the notes with visible light as each of the notes are transported past the evaluating unit; determining a correlation value between the visible light reflectance samples and the infrared light reflectance samples for each of the notes; and comparing the determined correlation value for each of the notes to a threshold value stored in a memory of the currency handling system.
- 82. The method of claim 81 wherein determining a correlation value further comprises:normalizing a rage of visible light reflectance values; normalizing a corresponding range of infrared light reflectance samples; summing the product of each of the normalized visible light reflectance samples and each of the infrared light reflectance samples; and dividing the sum of the products by the number of samples in the range of samples.
- 83. The method of claim 81 further comprising producing a suspect document error signal when the determined correlation value for each of the notes does not favorably compare to the stored threshold value.
- 84. The method of claim 81 wherein the infrared light source generates infrared light having a wavelength between about 850 nanometers and about 950 nanometers.
- 85. The method of claim 84 wherein the wavelength is about 875 nanometers.
- 86. The method of claim 81 wherein comparing the determined correlation value further comprises comparing the determined correlation value for each of the notes to one of a plurality of threshold values stored in a memory of the currency handling system, the plurality of stored threshold values corresponding to a plurality of authentication sensitivities.
- 87. The method of claim 81 wherein the authenticity of the notes is assessed relative to being Mexican 50 Peso notes.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
This application claims the benefit of copending U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/145,614, filed Jul. 26, 1999.
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