1. Technical Field
The present invention relates generally to currency processing machines, and more specifically to a system and method for detecting optically variable ink on notes by recording images of the notes using multiple modes of illumination that facilitate optimal imaging of specific features.
2. Description of Related Art
Automated, high-volume currency processing is a growing international industry affecting numerous aspects of the distribution, collection, and accounting of paper currency. Currency processing presents unique labor task issues that are intertwined with security considerations. It requires numerous individual tasks, for example: the collection of single notes by a cashier or bank teller, the accounting of individual commercial deposits or bank teller pay-in accounts, the assimilation and shipment of individual deposits or accounts to a central processing facility, the handling and accounting of a currency shipment after it arrives at a processing facility, and the processing of individual accounts through automated processing machines. Any step in the process that can be automated, thereby eliminating the need for a human labor task, saves both the labor requirements for processing currency and increases the security of the entire process. Security is increased when instituting automated processes by eliminating opportunities for theft, inadvertent loss, or mishandling of currency and increasing accounting accuracy.
A highly automated, high-volume processing system is essential to numerous levels of currency distribution and collection networks. Several designs of high-volume processing machines are available in the prior art and used by such varied interests as national central banks, independent currency transporting companies, currency printing facilities, and individual banks. In general, currency processing machines utilize a conveyer system which transports individual notes past a series of detectors. By way of example, a note may be passed through a series of electrical transducers designed to measure the note's width, length, and thickness. The next set of sensors could be optical sensors recording the note's color patterns or serial number. Detectors can likewise be used to detect specific magnetic or other physical characteristics of individual notes.
High volume currency processing machines typically pull individual notes from a stack of currency through a mechanical conveyer past several different detectors in order to facilitate the sorting of the individual notes and the accumulation of data regarding each note fed through the machine. For example, a currency processing machine can perform the simple tasks of processing a stack of currency in order to ensure that it is all of one denomination with proper fitness characteristics while simultaneously counting the stack to confirm a previous accounting. A slightly more complex task of separating a stack of currency into individual denominations while simultaneously counting the currency can be accomplished as well.
On the more complex end of prior art currency processing machines, a stack of currency consisting of various denominations can be fed into the machine for a processing that results in the separation of each denomination, a rejection of any currency that does not meet fitness specifications, the identification of counterfeit bills, and the tracking of individual notes by serial number. The detection of counterfeit bills in particular is an increasingly complex task as the number of anti-counterfeiting features incorporated into currency notes increase both in number and sophistication.
Among the most effect security measures in use are color shifting elements (CSE) such as optical variable ink (OVI), color shifting foils, and similar materials. These elements produce different reflective colors (e.g., magenta and green) at different angles of incidence and reflection. CSEs are widely used security features on major currencies such as the US dollar and the Euro and similar documents. CSEs are typically classified as public security features, meaning they are overt and easily recognizable by the members of the general public upon visual inspection of the note, in contrast to esoteric security features like magnetic strips that are only detected by specialized equipment. Because CSEs such as optically variable inks and foils are considered public security features there are no CSE detectors on high-speed currency sorters.
The present invention provides a method and apparatus for determining the presence of Color Shifting Elements (CSE) such as optically variable inks and foils on documents such as bank notes. The invention comprises passing a document past an image sensor such as a line scan camera while sequentially illuminating the document from at least two alternating azimuths, wherein a different angle of incidence of illumination is used for each line scanned by the camera, producing an interleaved image of the document. In a preferred embodiment, the light source at each azimuth alternates between different colors, producing an image that is interleaved according to color and azimuth of illumination. A transform is extracted from each azimuth of illumination to produce a reflected color value for that azimuth such as a hue value or red/green ratio. The reflected color values of the two azimuths are compared to each other. A difference in reflected colors between azimuths of illumination indicates the presence of a CSE on the document.
The novel features believed characteristic of the invention are set forth in the appended claims. The invention itself, however, as well as the preferred mode of use, further objectives and advantages thereof, will be best understood by reference to the following detailed description of illustrative embodiments when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The limitation of the prior art imaging techniques is that they rely on reflectance measurements over a single spectrum of light, producing a one dimensional metric. The present invention replaces the single white light reflectance measurement of the prior art with sequenced illumination using different wavelengths of light (e.g., red, green, blue, UV, IR). Soiling of the note (including ink wear) produces different reflectance effects in each color, which are not visible in a single white light image.
This sequenced illumination produces an interleaved image in which each line scanned by the camera 201 is recorded under the illumination of a different wavelength of light in a pre-determined sequence (e.g., red, green, blue, UV, red, green, blue, UV, etc) until the entire note 202 is scanned.
At a minimum, the light source 203 uses two different wavelengths. In a preferred embodiment, four wavelengths are used. The illumination switching between the different colors is synchronized with the image capture by the camera 201 and may use a simple repeating pattern such as that described above or a more complex pattern (explained in more detail below).
It should be emphasized that images 310, 320, 330 are not color images. All of the scan lines, regardless of the color emitted by the light source, are recorded by the same camera in greyscale. However, the reflection of light will differ according to the color of the light. This is due to the way photons of different wavelengths interact with ink and surface features on the note (including soiling). As a consequence, even though the reflective images produced under different wavelengths of illumination are all recorded in greyscale, each image reveals features not seen in the others, as shown in
An essential element of the efficacy of the present invention is the recording of the different wavelength images at the same location by the same camera. If the different images were recorded separately at different locations, slight variations in the position of the note relative to each camera would make it more difficult to composite and compare the separate wavelength images, thereby greatly reducing the accuracy of the image analysis.
Whereas the prior art is limited to merely measuring the reflectance over a fixed spectrum in terms of brighter or darker, the present invention allows the cross referencing of reflected light of different wavelengths and different illumination modes.
In addition to using different wavelengths of reflected light, sequenced illumination may also alternate between reflective and transmissive illumination, as well as illumination from different angles of incidence to the note (different azimuths).
In this example, the currency note 401 moves along a straight note guide 402 in the currency processor. It should be pointed out that in some embodiments, the note guide 402 may be curved. However, the straight note guide in the present example allows for easier illustration.
Light sources 410 and 420 are used in the multi-azimuth mode of operation. Similar to the light source shown in
Color Shifting Elements (CSE) produce different reflective colors (e.g., magenta and green) at different angles of incidence and reflection, even if the spectrum of illumination is the same for both angles (e.g., white light). CSEs include optically variable ink (OVI), optically variable foils, and similar types of color shifting materials. After more than a decade in circulation, CSEs have remained a widely used public security feature on bank notes and similar documents, easily identifiable by the general public. However, currently there are no CSE detectors on high-speed currency sorters.
The multi-azimuth mode of sequenced illumination of the present invention provides an effective means for detecting CSEs without the need for additional specialized equipment, thereby filling a security gap in present high-speed processors. Not only does the present invention allow for the detection of CSEs on notes, it can also be used to evaluate their fitness.
If the light source 520 and observer 530 are held in the same position relative to each other, the only way for the observer in this example to see the green reflectance 512 is to change the angle of the bank note 510 and its CSE 511 relative to the light source and observer, as shown in
The present invention overcomes this difficulty by manipulating the angle of illumination and reflection while leaving the angle between the camera and the note constant. As shown in
In addition to alternating the azimuth of illumination, each of the light sources 620, 630 has multiple LEDs, allowing each light source to illuminate the CSE with different colors in an interleaved pattern as described above.
The sequenced illumination allows the present invention to interleave the different reflective colors to produce a composite image of the CSE feature on the document. As with the above example, the images produced by the different reflective colors of the CSE are not color images but instead are recorded in greyscale. However, the image of the CSE is slightly different for each reflected wavelength.
It should be emphasized that CSEs are not limited to reflecting only two different wavelengths. CSEs may reflect three or more different colors at different angles of incidence and reflection. Applying this option to the present invention would therefore entail a separate light source at each azimuth of illumination corresponding to each reflected color. However, for ease of illustration the present example restricts itself to a two-color CSE.
Furthermore, the wavelengths reflected by CSEs do not have to be in the visible range. Typically CSEs are used as public security features that are overt and easily recognizable by members of the general public upon visual inspection. However, by enabling CSE detection during high speed processing, the present invention permits the introduction of covert CSEs that shift between non-visible wavelengths of light. For example, a currency note might include a CSE that shifts between different IR wavelengths. Obviously such non-visible CSEs are intended only for high speed processing and may complement the visible CSEs used for visual verification by the public.
The lookup table shown in
Applying this lookup table to the sequential illumination of a note, scan line 1 would be illuminated by red light, while the remaining LEDs remain off. For line 2, only the green LED is lit. Similarly, only the blue LED is lit for line 3, and only the IR LED is lit for line 4. For line 5, the red, green and blue LEDs are all lit at full intensity while the IR LED is off, thereby producing a white light reflectance.
The illumination sequence shown in
Once the raw image is acquired, the next step is observation extraction (step 1002). This is the process of extracting a multi-dimensional observation from the raw data based on the known document type: specific currency (e.g., US dollar or Euro), denomination and series (e.g., 1996 US twenty dollar bill), and specific orientation presented to the camera (e.g., front face left edge leading). Observation extraction is also based on the image geometry, which describes the illumination sequence (mode) that was used to acquire the raw data for this note type, as well as the known location and rotation of the document within the acquired image frame (document skew).
Following observation extraction, the invention applies a Transformation Function to the data (step 1003). This is a mathematical transformation function that converts the multi-dimensional observation data into a three-dimensional vector. This process can be quite complex and may be any linear or non-linear combination of the observation data. For example, the observation data may be a two-dimensional array corresponding to a certain rectangular region of the note, wherein each point in the two-dimensional array is a three-dimensional value containing a red, green, and blue reflectance value. The Transformation Function may convert this into a single three-dimensional measurement that contains a mean hue, saturation, and luminance value for the entire rectangular region. For example, when detecting color shifting elements, the transform may produce a hue value from the RGB values. Alternatively, the transform may produce an RIG ratio. Other methods may be used to determine the color reflected by the surface of the note.
From the Transformation Function, the system determines the detected color from the azimuth in question (step 1004). Steps 1003 and 1004 are performed in parallel for each azimuth of illumination.
After the system determines the reflected color in step 1004, it then compares this to the color detected from the other azimuth(s) (step 1005). If there is indeed a CSE present on the image region of the note the comparison in step 1005 will reveal a difference in the values between the azimuths, e.g., hue values or RIG ratios. By contrast, the values will not vary between azimuths if there is no CSE present.
The methods of sequential illumination described above are not limited to use with currency notes. They can also be applied to other types of documents that circulate widely such as checks, bonds, share certificates, etc.
Although preferred embodiments of the present invention have been described in the foregoing Detailed Description and illustrated in the accompanying drawings, it will be understood that the invention is not limited to the embodiments disclosed, but is capable of numerous rearrangements, modifications, and substitutions of parts and elements without departing from the spirit of the invention. Accordingly, the present invention is intended to encompass such rearrangements, modifications, and substitutions of parts and elements as fall within the scope of the appended claims.
This application is related to co-pending application Ser. No. 12/277,936 filed Nov. 25, 2008, entitled “Sequenced Illumination,” the technical disclosures of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference.