The present invention pertains to recognition systems and particularly to biometric recognition systems. More particularly, the invention pertains to iris recognition systems.
Related applications may include U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/979,129, filed Nov. 3, 2004, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/655,124, filed Sep. 5, 2003; and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/382,373, filed May 9, 2006, which are hereby incorporated by reference.
U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/778,770, filed Mar. 3, 2006, is hereby incorporated by reference.
U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/275,703, filed Jan. 25, 2006, is hereby incorporated by reference.
U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/647,270, filed Jan. 26, 2005, is hereby incorporated by reference.
U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/043,366, filed Jan. 26, 2005, is hereby incorporated by reference.
U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/372,854, filed Mar. 10, 2006, is hereby incorporated by reference.
U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/672,108, filed Feb. 7, 2007, is hereby incorporated by reference.
U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/675,424, filed Feb. 15, 2007 is hereby incorporated by reference.
U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/681,614, filed Mar. 2, 2007 is hereby incorporated by reference.
The present invention pertains to the iris recognition technology and human authentication methods. Iris patterns are proven to be unique and stable. The success of iris recognition system lies in using appropriate representations scheme of these unique iris patterns. This invention is about the representation of iris patterns extracted from the iris map. In particular, it presents a robust encoding method of the iris textures to compress the iris pixel information into few bits that constitute the iris barcode to be stored or matched against database templates of same form. The iris encoding method is reliable to extract key bits of information under various conditions of capture, such as illumination, obscuration or eye illuminations variations.
a and 8b are diagrams illustrating an encoding scheme with binning of a barcode based on minima and maxima of signals.
The present system may relate to biometrics, an iris recognition system, image metrics, authentication, access control, monitoring, identification, and security and surveillance systems. The present system addresses processing procedure of iris encoding to support in development of improved iris recognition systems. The present system may provide methods to compress the extracted normalized iris map image into a compact bit representation of the iris pixels while preserving the key iris pattern information. This compact representation of iris may be computed to execute an accurate matching and enrollment.
The overall eye detection system is shown in
One may extract and encode the most discriminating information present in an iris pattern. Just significant features of the iris texture are encoded so that comparisons between templates may be made faster and more reliable. Many iris recognition systems might use a band pass decomposition of the iris image using two-dimensional (2D) modulated filters with multiple parameter dependencies. A present simplified 1D phase-based encoding approach may use a single periodic filter configured by a single parameter.
The present approach may be staged into multiple steps to extract features at different central frequencies and at different phasor quantizations. The approach may compress an iris pattern into fewer bits to an extent to make a match without having to compute all bits (minimum savings may reach fifty percent relative to the bit count of other approaches), thus allowing for efficient storage and fast comparison of large iris databases. In addition, the present encoder may be an extension to what is implemented to segment the iris boundaries, and thus some of the approach may be executed at an early stage during segmentation to save on the computation load.
A key component of iris recognition system may be an encoding scheme to extract the key features of the iris texture into fewer bits which are then used to match the subjects. The matching may be significantly influenced by many factors including the segmentation, feature extraction, and spatial resolution and image quality.
The present approach may extract and encode the most discriminating information present in an iris pattern. The present feature extraction and encoding scheme may be embedded within one-dimensional polar segmentation (1D POSE) and thus reduce sources of errors and allow for staged matching for fast iris indexing. Just the significant features of the iris texture are to be encoded so that comparisons between templates may be made unbiased. Many other iris recognition systems may use a band pass decomposition of the iris image using a 2D Gabor (i.e., a modulated sine and cosine waves with a Gaussian function) or in general wavelet functions to create a biometric template.
Wavelets may be used to decompose the data in the iris map into components that presented at different levels of resolution. A number of wavelet filters may often be applied to a 2D iris map at multi-resolution levels to extract localized features in spectral and spatial domains, and allow matching at multilevel resolutions.
Gabor or log-Gabor filters (somewhat popular in iris recognition systems) appear to be simply subsets of wavelet functions and may be able to provide conjoint representations of the features in space and spatial frequency. These techniques might be effective in extracting the iris features; however, their implementation and configurations appear to involve multiple parameter settings and other computational burdens. While the current implementations of iris encoding may be well represented by any wavelet function or 2D Gabor functions, the Gabor decomposition is difficult to compute and lacks some of the mathematical conveniences that are desired for good implementations, such as not being invertible, non-linear reconstruction, and maltreatment of DC components.
The present encoder may incorporate 1D encoding, a single filter to extract phase information, and a simple unbiased filter to cancel out DC components and extract just significant discriminating information present in the phase content of an iris pattern. The encoder may compress the iris pattern into fewer bits (e.g., the iris code may use just one-half bit counts of current iris code methods. The encoder approach may be staged into multiple independent steps thus allowing flexibility in producing code bits to an extent to make a match without having to compute all of the bits, and some of the encoder approach steps may be executed at an early stage during segmentation to save on the computation load.
The present approach and system may extract and encode the most discriminating information present in an iris pattern using a straightforward approach that extends upon the Haar wavelet filters to any form of a symmetric waveform. The approach may start with a feature vector, i.e. intensity function as a function of radial variable extracted from the iris image at each angle. The feature vector may be interpolated to generate a radial resolution covering the features of the iris pattern between the two iris borders at specified angles. Then one may dot product the extracted feature vector by a single periodic filter. Various waveforms may be used to construct the filter with an emphasis that the symmetric waveform sums to zero to cancel out any DC components and eliminate unbiased results (e.g., a Gabor filter may suffer from this kind of bias). One may then capture the phase content of the feature vector by computing the sum over a shifted segment/window (i.e., window width equals the waveform time period) corresponding to the selected center frequency. Thus, an iris template may be generated as a compressed version of the generated phasor feature elements. The summed feature vector elements may be sign quantized so that a positive value is represented as 1, and a negative value as 0 (or vice versa). This may result in a compact biometric template consisting of half counts of bits of related art encoding approaches. Additional bits may also be generated by repeating the same procedure using shifted versions of the filter.
The present approach may start with the feature vector extracted from the iris image at each angle. The feature vector may be interpolated to generate the radial resolution covering the features of the iris pattern between the two iris borders at the specified angle. Then one may dot product the extracted feature vector by a single periodic filter. Various waveforms may be used to construct the filter with an emphasis that the symmetric waveform sums to zero to cancel out any DC components and eliminate unbiased results. Then one may capture the phase content of the feature vector by computing the sum over a shifted segment/window (window width equals to the waveform time period) corresponding to the selected center frequency. Thus, an iris template may be generated as a compressed version of these generated phasor feature elements. The summed feature vector elements may be sign quantized so that a significant positive value is represented as 1, a significant negative value as 0, and insignificant value close to zero is defined by an unknown bit as an x. This may result into a more accurate presentation of the iris patterns by excluding the uncertain bits associated with noise and interference distortions. Additional bits may also be generated by repeating the same procedure using shifted versions of the filter.
To compress an image, one may encode it. The may be a map, having radial resolution versus angular resolution. The radial resolution (RR) may have a 100 points and the angular resolution (AR) may have 360 degrees. However, one may do just every other degree going completely around the eye to end up with 180 degrees for the angular resolution. The map may be of an iris. The radial marks on the iris may be decimated or interpolated.
The size of the data may be RR×AR bytes. Each pixel may be a byte with, for instance, 8 bits per byte. A goal of the encoding may be to compress data down to small quantity or size. The present invention or approach could take the image and run it through a log Gabor wavelet to result in a compressed image with a sign of two outputs—real and imaginary which may be done in the related art. Unlike that art, the present invention may do the analysis or encoding just on the radial axis for each angle. One may have radial values extracted at each angle and at the specific radial resolution. Encoding may be done at the same time as the segmentation. One may have three outcomes (i.e., 0, 1 and unknown (x) for bit representation. The related art may just have two outcomes, 1 and 0, and assign a value of 1 or 0, which is a strong indication for a weak representation of values that at the transition from positive to negative or vice versa. The present system may realistically place a value, as it appears, which is a 1, 0, or an unknown x for the insignificant values approaching zero. It may be better to note just the strong values and ignore the insignificant as signs can vary dramatically at values close to zero. Further, the present encoding scheme may deal with just one dimension and not two. The information here may be on a string or the radial of the material to be mapped and encoded.
Iris encoding may be a key component of an iris recognition system and may be used to extract the key features of the iris texture into fewer bits which are then used to match the subjects. The matching may be significantly influenced by many factors including the segmentation, feature extraction, spatial resolution and image quality. The present approach may extract and encode the most discriminating information present in an iris pattern. The present feature extraction and encoding scheme may be embedded within the 1D POSE segmentation to reduce sources of errors and allow for staged matching for fast iris indexing. With the present approach, just the significant features of the iris texture are to be encoded so that comparisons between templates may be made fast and unbiased.
The present approach may be based on a 1D analysis. A 1D feature may be advantageous over the 2D feature extraction in terms of computation and robustness. To avoid unbiased features, one may convolve the filters only in the radial axis. Convolving the filters in both directions at different scales may degrade performance. The radial direction may have most of the crucial information and preserve iris information regardless whether the pupil is dilated or not. On the other hand, convolving the filters on the angular direction may be affected by the occlusions of the iris as well as by the under-sampling of the iris map. The present system may deploy a one-dimensional approach applied in a radial direction. As part of the POSE segmentation technique, the intensities may be convolved by a step function. So the feature extraction may be may be combined with the segmentation into a single step and thus reduce computation.
Decomposition of the intensity values may be accomplished by using a new set of filters as an extension to 1D Haar wavelet functions or step function where the emphasis is made to construct a periodic one to extract quadratic information of the intensity variations. The filter outputs may then be binarized based on the sign values to present the real and imaginary parts of the equivalent Gabor filters without constructing Gabor filters.
The present approach may be staged into multiple steps that permit fast and quick matches without processing the entire iris code. The approach may allow extracting additional iris code to characterize the iris texture at different central frequencies and at a higher order complex domain. Extraction of additional bits may be possible with the present approach and may be staged as needed if a match does not occur at the first settings.
Instead of constructing two filters, one may construct one 1D periodic filter (note
Decomposition of the intensity signal may be accomplished with the following items. Convolution may be effected using a filter of a single period wave and having a central frequency specified by the period T. The dot product of the signal and the filter may be constructed to generate an output signal,
y(r)=Iθ(r)·ƒ(r).
The signal Iθ(r) may denote the intensity signal extracted at each angle as a function of the radius values. These may be interpolated image intensity values between the two boundaries of the iris and be sampled to a predefined number of radius samples Nr. The function ƒ(r) may represent the filter function of length Nr.
One may sum over a “T” period 12 of the output signal 13 using a single, two shifted sum 14 (that constitutes the even and odd symmetry components of the intensity signal) or be even more based upon multiple shifts as shown in
Unlike the Gabor or wavelet approach, the present approach may allow splitting the outputs into two or more stages for quick indexing. Since the quadratic information may be computed using separate functions, one can stage the encoding approach using first the non-shifted function and then computing an iris code having the same size as the iris map, i.e., Nr×Nθ. The mask matrix may also be constructed at this smaller size than previously done. There appears to be no need to duplicate the mask size as done in a known Daugman encoding approach. Unlike a related art approach, one may use the present approach to extract additional codes as needed based upon filter outputs of different period shifts, as well as scaled periods for different central frequencies if a match does not occur. The approach may provide flexibility to stage the matching process and allow extraction of fewer bits to make a match.
Encoding may be a way to compress the most discriminating information present within the iris map into fewer bits so that comparisons between templates can be made real-time. One may make use of multi-band decomposition of the iris map to extract the fine and coarse information content of the iris distinctive patterns. A present method for iris feature encoding may be presented in several algorithms.
Wavelets may be used to decompose the iris map into bank of filters to extract wavelet coefficients at different resolutions. Wavelet coefficients may then be encoded at each band to compress the map into fewer bits representing the iris signature. An advantage of using wavelet is that it may be well localized in both spatial and frequency domain.
As to the Gabor/Log Gabor wavelet, Daugman appeared to make use of a two-dimensional (2D) Gabor filter to encode iris maps. A Gabor filter may be built on the basis of sine cosine wave modulation with a Gaussian waveform. This may make it as a special case of a wavelet and thus it can indeed localize features in both spatial and frequency domains.
Decomposition of an image may be accomplished using a quadrature pair of Gabor filters with real parts associated with the cosine modulation and the imaginary part associated with the sine modulation. The sign of the real and imaginary parts may be used to quantize the phase information into four levels using 0/1 bits for positive/negative signs of each of the real and imaginary components.
The Haar wavelet may be a simplified version of a wavelet transform to extract features from the iris map. Gabor and a like wavelet may require many parameters for setting and configuration.
In the options, four levels may be represented using the two bits of data, so each pixel in the iris map corresponds to two bits of data in the iris barcode (template). A total of Nr×Nq×2×L bits may be calculated for each barcode. L=number of bands, Nr and Nq indicate the size of the iris map.
The present encoding scheme may be applied to a 1D signal using radial signal rather than a 2D map. A three bit representation may be used rather than a two bit representation. One may extract as many bits (i.e., blocks of bits) as needed to quantify the information in the phasor only (i.e., no amplitude). This may be important when there are limited iris region due to obscuration (fewer bin comparisons). Thus, the more bit blocks that are extracted, then better matching may be expected. In addition, one may choose to use simple form waveforms (as shown in
Three-bit representation may be used in the present schemes. In other approaches, the feature vector may be sign quantized so that any positive value is represented by 1, and negative value by 0. However, in the present approach, the quantization may use three levels, in that a positive value is represented by 1, a negative value is represented by 0, and a value close to zero, i.e., ≦ν (tolerance), is represented by x (unknown). An unknown bit may be either 0 or 1.
The present approach and system may utilize various schemes of encoding. One scheme may be like the related art except that one may modify its technical approach to include three outcomes from the encoder rather than two outcomes as in the related art. The present encoding scheme may be applied to a one-dimensional (1D) signal using a radial signal rather than a 2D map.
The iris encoding scheme may have options of waveforms. Using one of the present algorithms, one may extract as many bit blocks as wished based on the following variations of the first, second and third algorithms, respectively. For any period selection, one may obtain a new set of bits; for any shift of the period, one may obtain a new set of bits; and for any wavelength, one may obtain a new set of bits. A fourth algorithm may result into a single block of bits.
A signal may be convoluted. One may get scores for each value of the waveform. A convolution result or output may be f(r). If f(r) is greater than gamma (γ), then it may be one; if it is less than gamma, then it may be zero; and if it is within gamma or less than gamma, then it may be unknown (x). An unknown measure of a pixel may be masked as the masked information may be unknown. Again, this analysis may be done just on the radial one dimension.
One may run a sign test and end up with just one bit per value and save 50 percent on a use of bits. If the signal is not sufficiently discriminant for a match, then one may do a shift to get another bit. Convolution may be done on a shifted version of the same wavelength. Shift ΔT may equal T/2.
A general form to convolve with a shifted version of the same waveform may be
f(rk)=I(r)*u(r−ΔTk)
where I(r) is an intensity vector and * is the convolve symbol.
A goal is to have one bit, but if one does not get a match, one may increase it to two, three or more bits until a match is obtained. In a closed form, the unknown notion of 1, 0, x, may be used for an outcome. The complete period of a signal may be used. For each shifting, the sign test may be performed. The waveform may be generalized.
f(r)=I(r)*u(r), where f(r) may be a result of a convolution, I(r) is an operator and * indicates convolving. u(r) may indicate for an example a step function 51 as shown in
Note that “x” means “unknown” which means that the pixel has to be masked in the barcode and it is not relevant to set it to either 0 or 1. The same applies to a shifted version of u(r).
For ΔT=T/2, one may have
Another approach or scheme of encoding would not use convolution of
The preceding may be regarded as a sign test for a bit. The following might be noted.
In another approach or scheme, one might “bin it”, having a waveform 91 as shown in
The scheme may be based on bins (i.e., binning approach) which determine the localized features of a signal within the bins. The bins may be shown to have a length T. The bins do not necessarily have to be uniform. For instance, one may chose to have smaller bins at the vicinity of the inner bound and larger bins at the outer bound (where the SNR is expected to be smaller).
In another approach or scheme, as indicated in
∀f(r)=I(r)−ΣI(r) within the two valleys. In a sense,
There may be a move to capture the peaks and valleys, and use 1's for peaks and 0's for valleys with respect to average values. About everything else may be regarded as unknown, i.e., transition areas where f(r) approaches zero.
The binning of the barcode may be based upon the local minima 92 and maxima 93 of the radial signal per each angle, as shown in a graph 94 of
When there are two outcomes for the same pixel, the confirmed bits may be selected over the unknown bit choice.
b is a diagram of another algorithm noted herein. An iris map 96 which has its peaks 97 and valleys 98 located. These located peaks and valleys and other map 96 information may have equations 101 and 102, respectively, applied to them. The results from equations 101 and 102 may go to diamond symbols 103 and 104, which asks a question, “sign (f(r))<0?” A map mask 105, corresponding to iris map 96, may have an output to a diamond symbol 106, which asks a question, “maskθ(r)>0?” If an answer to the question of symbol 106 is yes, then a one may go to a code mask 108, and if the answer is no, then a zero may go to the code mask 108. If an answer to the question of symbol 103 is yes, then a zero may go to a barcode 107 and symbol 106, and if the answer is no, then a one may go to the code mask 108. If an answer to the question of symbol 104 is yes, then a one may go the barcode 107 and the symbol 106, and if the answer is no, then a zero may go to the code mask 108.
An analysis (i.e., encoding) may be performed on the radial axis per each angle.
f(r)=I(r)*u(r)
Sign Test
γ
0/1 or x.
To obtain additional bits per each pixel value,
f(r)=I(r)*u(r−ΔTk).
The three bit approach may be regarded as a trick to eliminate much noise. It may be good for f(r) values as they are considered as unknown since a value is not assigned to it. As to an unknown, a separate weight may be assigned. The weight may vary between from low to high but not be a 100 percent of either extreme since that would amount to one of the other two values. This weighting approach may handle the encoding uncertainty or noise but not the segmentation noise.
In the present specification, some of the matter may be of a hypothetical or prophetic nature although stated in another manner or tense.
Although the invention has been described with respect to at least one illustrative example, many variations and modifications will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon reading the present specification. It is therefore the intention that the appended claims be interpreted as broadly as possible in view of the prior art to include all such variations and modifications.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/778,770, filed Mar. 3, 2006. This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/275,703, filed Jan. 25, 2006, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/647,270, filed Jan. 26, 2005. This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/043,366, filed Jan. 26, 2005. This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/372,854, filed Mar. 10, 2006; This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/672,108, filed Feb. 7, 2007. This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/675,424, filed Feb. 15, 2007. This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/681,614, filed Mar. 2, 2007.
The government may have rights in the present invention.
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