The present application claims priority from Japanese application JPA-2007-262845 filed on Oct. 9, 2007, the content of which is hereby incorporated by reference into this application.
The present invention relates to a personal authentication apparatus using a living body. More particularly, it relates to a biometric personal authentication apparatus based on the vein pattern of a finger.
In recent years, attention has been focused on biometric authentications as security schemes where carrying a key or the like is unnecessary, a high convenience is accomplished, and there is a less danger of being illegally exercised by being lost or stolen. In these biometric authentications, a part of the body of an individual person, such as fingerprint, iris, or vein pattern, is used as the key. Of these biometric authentications, in the authentication methods using the vein pattern of a finger, criminal investigation is not associated therewith, or, unlike the case of the iris, an eyeball is not directly illuminated with light. Accordingly, in the authentication methods using the finger-vein pattern, there exists an advantage of causing only a little sense of psychological resistance. Also, in the authentication methods using the finger-vein pattern, the authentication is based not on characteristics of the easily observable living-body surface, but on inner characteristics of the living body. Consequently, there also exists an advantage that there is no residual property, and that their forgery is difficult to implement.
As a conventional embodiment of the finger-vein authentications of this type, there has been known an authentication apparatus disclosed in, e.g., JP-A-2007-206991. Not being limited to this apparatus, in the finger-vein authentications, there has been known the following method: Namely, in order to image the vein pattern of a finger, the finger is illuminated with near-infrared light, then being seen through with the near-infrared light which has passed through the inside of the finger. Here, in general, hemoglobin in the blood which is flowing in the vein absorbs the near-infrared light. As a result, in the vein part, the light is weakened after transmitting there; whereas, in the other part, the light passes therethrough just as it is. Accordingly, the contrast between these lights forms the vein pattern. In particular in JP-A-2007-206991, the following scheme is disclosed: Namely, in order to image the vein pattern of the ball side of a finger, the near-infrared light is caused to enter the inside of the finger from a part of the ball side of the finger. Moreover, the vein pattern of the ball side is subjected to the transmission imaging, using the light which travels in the inside of the finger while being scattered there, and which appears onto the outside of the finger from a different part of the same ball side of the finger. The employment of this scheme allows a light source and a vein imaging camera to be united and integrated only at the finger's ball-side. As a result, an extra structure becomes unnecessary on the periphery of a part on which the finger should be placed in the authentication apparatus. Consequently, it has been found successful to implement the flat-plane-shaped and space-saving authentication apparatus.
Also, in JP-A-2004-265269, the disclosure has been made concerning the small-size implementation of a part in which the user is engaged at the time of the authentication, such as an open-type apparatus where light sources are positioned on both side-surfaces of the finger.
In the finger-vein authentications, utilization value as alternatives to keys exists in a variety of aspects where the keys and locks have been employed up to the present. This utilization value as the alternatives to the keys is to be able to accomplish such purposes as a reinforcement in the security and an enhancement in the convenience resulting from a high operability of merely holding a finger over the authentication apparatuses. Depending on the products into which the finger-vein authentications are to be installed, however, many of the products find it difficult to ensure their adequate set-up locations. Accordingly, small-size implementation of the authentication apparatuses becomes important. In the authentication apparatus disclosed in JP-A-2007-206991, eliminating a protrusion onto the rear side of the finger is made possible by uniting and integrating the light source and the vein imaging camera onto the ball side of the finger. No sufficient consideration, however, has been given to a factor of reducing thickness of the entire apparatus configured by such components as the light source and camera gathered to the finger's ball-side. Also, in JP-A-2004-265269 described above, the consideration has been given to the small-size implementation of the part which concerns the user at the time of the authentication, such as an open-type apparatus where the light sources are positioned on both side-surfaces of the finger. No study, however, has been made to thin-type and small-size implementation of the entire apparatus.
Furthermore, in the above-described schemes, the disclosures have been made concerning the configurations where priority is given to the small-size implementation and the enhancement of the convenience. Namely, a light-source placement which is optimum for the clear vein-pattern imaging is not necessarily employed. Accordingly, it cannot be said that sufficient consideration has been given to the imaging quality.
For example, in the structure disclosed in JP-A-2007-206991 where the finger's imaging target part and the light-incoming part are on the same plane, the intensity of light at the light-incoming part needs to be enhanced. This light-intensity enhancement is needed in order to deliver the light to the target part with intensity sufficiently high to permit the vein to be reflected on the imaging plane. On account of this enhancement of light, it leaks out of a part of the finger which is positioned halfway until the light reaches the imaging plane. Moreover, this light which has leaked out becomes external light with respect to the imaging plane. Namely, the surface of the imaging plane is illuminated with this external light. As a result, this external light has become a factor of degrading the vein imaging quality. In addition to this, when priority is given to the further small-size implementation to narrow the target range of the finger's imaging, information amount on the vein pattern used for the authentication is lowered. Consequently, there has existed a concern of exerting a bad influence on the authentication accuracy as well.
In view of this situation, an object of the present invention is to provide a well-balanced finger-vein authentication apparatus which is capable of accomplishing not only the small-size and thin-type implementation thereof, but also a little deterioration in the authentication accuracy. Also, a second object of the present invention is to provide application functions which are capable of having a high convenience and serving for a security enhancement as well.
In order to accomplish these objects, in the present invention, there is provided a finger-vein authentication apparatus including a light source for illuminating, one of both side-surfaces of a fingertip of a finger, and an image sensor for imaging the other surface of the fingertip, the light source and the image sensor being positioned at the both sides of a nail of the fingertip with the nail sandwiched therebetween, wherein a fingertip guidance jig for supporting the fingertip and a finger-root guidance jig for supporting a finger-root of the finger are set up between the light source and the image sensor, a light-shielding unit being set up on the light-source side, the light-shielding unit being used for shielding the illumination light such that the illumination light will not diffract onto a ball side of the finger, an empty clearance being provided at a position under a half plane of the finger's ball side on the imaging side.
According to the present invention, it becomes possible to implement the high-convenience authentication apparatus where the finger's rear-surface side is opened, and although formed into the thin-type authentication apparatus, to implement a clear vein imaging via a light illumination from the opposite surface side against the imaging target plane. Also, the empty clearance is provided at only the position under the half lower plane of the finger on the imaging-plane side. This empty clearance makes it possible to avoid a crushing of the vein pattern due to a pressure applied onto the imaging plane by touching the structure with the finger. Also, the light-shielding unit set up on the light-source side makes it possible to suppress the diffraction of light from the light-source side.
Other objects, features and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following description of the embodiments of the invention taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Hereinafter, the explanation will be given below concerning embodiments of the present invention.
Meanwhile, on the side in proximity to a finger-root side, a half-circle-shaped finger guidance jig 106 is provided. This finger guidance jig 106 has a function of guiding the finger such that, similar to the half-circle-shaped depression 104, the position and inclination of the finger will become stabilized on each trial of the placement. This is achieved by taking advantage of the fact that, when the finger is placed on the half circle, the finger is most likely to be stabilized at the lowest position thereof. Also, a button switch 118 can also be provided in the depression 104. Pressing the switch 118 allows the user to initiatively instruct the authentication itself, or a timing for exercising some other control together with the authentication. Also, an imaging aperture part 110 is positioned such that the part 110 faces mainly a part of the finger ranging from the fingertip to a first joint of the finger. Accordingly, this position allows the finger to be imaged from the camera 112 which is positioned behind the part 110.
This camera may be a common camera where an image device such as CCD and lenses are integrated, or may be a thin flat-panel sensor. When the flat-panel sensor is used, au upper surface cover covering the camera 112 may be of a thickness which is so thick as to contain only the flat-panel sensor. This thickness makes it possible to implement a conformation like only the imaging aperture part 110 stands just like a wall having a thickness equivalent to that of the flat-panel sensor. If, as the light source, a thin-type light source such as LED is employed similarly, the groove as the finger-placing guide is formed in a manner just like being sandwiched between the thin walls. In this case, in particular, when using a fingertip of the middle finger for the authentication, fingertips of the three fingers, i.e., index finger, middle finger, and ring finger, can be placed in a manner of being neatly arranged naturally without opening them forcibly. This makes it possible to prevent the finger to be rotated around the long-axis direction, thereby allowing implementation of the stable authentication. As described earlier, however, in the present invention where only the front-end portion up to the first joint of the finger is used for the authentication, arranging the three fingers neatly is easy with the covers sandwiched therebetween, even if the covers covering the camera and the light source are somewhat large. In the conventional scheme where the area up to the finger-root is employed as the authentication target area, a structure is employed where the finger is movable with its root as the central point. As a result, the mutually adjacent fingers are more proximate to each other as the positions come nearer to their roots. Accordingly, if the cover is large, the cover becomes an obstacle thereto at their root parts. Consequently, arranging the three fingers neatly becomes exceedingly difficult.
Here, in the present drawing, the imaging aperture part 110 is drawn such that the part 110 opens from a location closer to the finger-root side than the fingertip guidance jig 104. The position and width of the part 110, however, is not particularly limited thereto. Conversely, it is advantageous to set the position and width such that the largest possible range will be able to be imaged with respect to the long-axis direction of the finger, e.g., the vein pattern can be acquired in the widest possible range. In particular, if it is possible to acquire the area up to the fingertip as an image without fail, a unique determination of the image target area becomes easy by using the relative position information from the front-end position of the finger. This makes it possible to make a contribution to the enhancement in the authentication accuracy. In this case, however, the depression 104 in the fingertip guidance jig causes a problem from the imaging point-of-view in some cases. That is, when the fingertip is imaged from the camera side, a part of the finger contained in the depression 104 cannot be seen, since the part comes into the shade of a circumferential part which surrounds the depression 104. On account of this, whereas there appears a side effect that the depth of the depression becomes shallower on the camera side and that the effect of guiding the fingertip into the specified position is lowered, a devise may be made in which the circumferential part is lowered, and the reduction in the image-failed area of the fingertip is made as small as possible.
Meanwhile, a filter for permitting only the near-infrared region wavelength to pass therethrough is attached on the camera 112. This filter suppresses the influence of the visual-region light on the photographed image, thereby imaging the blood-vessel vein pattern clearly. A light-shielding partition wall 116 is provided in order to prevent the light from the light source 114 from leaking out toward the camera 112. Both the imaging aperture part 110 and the light-source aperture part 108 are covered with a glass or acryl plate. The glass or acryl plate, which is transparent to the wavelength region of the light source, permits the light to pass therethrough, and also prevents foreign substances from entering inside of the authentication apparatus. Instead of the above-described glass or acryl plate, the employment of an optical filter plate for permitting only the near-infrared region light to pass therethrough makes it possible to consolidate the two functions, i.e., the apparatus protection and visual-region light elimination, into the one piece of plate. This optical filter plate cuts off the visual-region light, thereby allowing accomplishment of an artistic consideration of making the inner components such as the light source 114 invisible. Moreover, the housing 100 including the light-source aperture part 108 and the imaging aperture part 110 may be integrally formed with the optical filter material.
The explanation of
Also, a display device such as liquid-crystal panel can be disposed at the bottom surface between the light-source aperture part 108 and the imaging aperture part 110 including the bottom surface 116. This allows implementation of display of message, illustration, and image for informing how to place the finger and the finger position. On the display device, usually, information such as point-in-time not related with the authentication can be displayed. At the time of authentication, the displayed contents are changed, and the display device becomes the finger-guiding guide. If the illustration and image indicate the position and direction of the finger just the way they are, implementation of the authentication at the correct position becomes possible only by superposing the finger on the illustration and image just as being indicated thereby, which is advantageous in the aspect of operability as well. After the finger has been placed thereon correctly, the display is not needed any more, and consideration is given so that the authentication will not be hindered by extinguishing the liquid crystal itself and its displaying light source such as backlight, if any. Otherwise, the backlight may be made usable for the authentication by employing the near-infrared region light for the backlight.
In the configuration illustrated in
Disposing the camera 112 obliquely as is illustrated in
In this case, on the other hand, there exists a problem that the camera, the finger, and the light source do not arrange in a straight line. In executing the imaging of the vein pattern, the clearest imaging quality can be obtained in the case where the camera and the light source are facing opposite to each other with the finger sandwiched therebetween. The reason for this is as follows: When the light comes from just behind the imaging target surface, the transmission light which projects the vein pattern can be made sufficiently intense while the too intense direct light from the light source is being concealed most appropriately by the finger itself. When the light-source position is shifted, the thickness of the side surface of the finger becomes thinner, since the cross section of the finger is approximately elliptic. As a result, the intensity of light becomes exceedingly high in the case where the light source can be seen through the thinner location. Also, as the position of the light source shifts nearer to the end, the diffraction of light to the nearer side becomes larger. Accordingly, it is preferable to make an adjustment so that the light will be most concentrated on an extension line between the camera and the finger by converging the light from the light source with a lens or the like. Also, as described earlier, it is of particular importance by devising the configuration of the bottom surface 116 to implement a structure capable of light-shielding for preventing the intense light from the light source from diffracting to the ball side of the finger.
When the side surface of the fingertip is used as the authentication target area, just as illustrated in the schematic diagram in
The method of the discrimination of the nail is performed, for example, as in the following steps: First, the contour of the nail is determined. As a method for determining the contour, the various commonly-known methods in the image processing are available, such as the method of connecting the edges by tracing them. With respect to the contour determined, attention is focused on the contour line traveling across the rear side of the finger, and then, it is checked whether or not, a bright region is present on the fingertip side whose luminance is higher than a constant value and which expands continuously. If the bright region is present, the area of the region is determined, and then, if the area is found to be larger than a predetermined threshold value, it can be judged that the nail is present.
Subsequently, the state of how the finger is placed is judged from the nail region determined as described above. This judgment is made, for example, as in the following ways: A first method is that the state of the finger is judged to be normal if the area of the nail or an area ratio of the nail occupying the front-end part of the nail falls within a constant range, judged to be rotated onto the light-source side if the area or the area ratio is smaller than the constant range, and judged to be rotated onto the camera side if the area or the area ratio is larger than that. The other method therefore is as follows: the nail area determined at the time of the registration of the vein pattern is recorded together with the vein pattern, and then, at the authentication processing, it is judged that the finger is placed correctly if the nail area similarly detected exhibits an error within a predetermined range with the nail area at the registration. With respect to the latter method, a feature point, not being limited to the area, may be used which is derived from a characteristic configuration of a part or the whole of the contour of the nail region. Especially, this feature point is, e.g., a part at which the contour is curved steeply, or a part at which the contour becomes a protrusion. If the position of this feature point coincides with the relative position with the vein pattern at the time of the registration, it can be judged that the vein pattern acquired based on the correct manner of the finger's placement coincides therewith correctly. If, conversely, the vein pattern differs therefrom significantly, there is a possibility that the vein pattern acquired based on a wrong manner of the finger's placement accidentally coincides with the registration pattern. This leads to an authentication mistake, and the coincidence is not regarded as being established. Incidentally, the feature point may similarly be derived from a characteristic interface configuration between the nail region and a region adjacent thereto.
The authentication apparatus in the present embodiment is particularly preferable for a case where the apparatus is used by being set up onto a door which is closed/opened using a holding handle 300. This holding handle 300 allows the finger to be guided into the respective constant positions regardless of whether the holding handle is held by the hand from above or under. This means that, if the user changes the way of holding the holding handle depending on his or her mood at that time, addressing the changed situation flexibly is made possible. In particular, when the authentication apparatus in the present embodiment is set up in an empty clearance between holding handle 300 and the door, the authentication apparatus is difficult to see from the user. Consequently, in the stable authentication, it is important to permit the finger to be guided into the predetermined position in a groping manner by taking advantage of the guidance jigs. Incidentally, the direction of the holding handle 300 is not limited to the transverse placement, but may also be placed longitudinally. In this case, it becomes a further advantage to be able to guide the finger into the constant position similarly regardless of whether the holding handle is held by the right hand or the left hand.
The schematic diagram illustrated in
Also, if the configuration of the bottom surface 116, which is positioned under the ball side when the finger is placed, is biased into only one direction as is illustrated in
Incidentally, in the foregoing description, the explanation has been given concerning the scheme where the two sets of the cameras and the light sources are provided. However, as is the case with the authentication apparatus illustrated in
The above-described concept of making the specifications of the different apparatus at the registration and the apparatus at the authentication is also applicable to other aspects. For example, in the apparatus at the registration, a wider range of vein pattern than the range imaged at the authentication is imaged in advance, and registered as a registration pattern, and thereby implementation of the correct authentication becomes possible even if some extent of position shift exists at the authentication. When implementing the small-size authentication apparatus just like the present invention, the imaging range is very likely to unavoidably become narrower, and a small position shift appears remarkably as a difference in the vein pattern. If a comparison is made between the photographed image where the entire finger is selected as the target range and the photographed image where only the fingertip is selected as the target range, this remarkable appearance of the position shift is obvious from the relative ratio between the shifts when the finger is moved by the same length. The shift which will occur when the user places the finger is not so much concerned with a difference in the imaging target range, so that the narrower the imaging target range becomes, the more remarkable the problem of position shift becomes. Incidentally, when imaging a wide range, the apparatus also becomes relatively large. However, overall effective utilization of space becomes impossible by limiting the apparatus to only one apparatus to be used for the registration, and disposing the only one apparatus at a location where space has a comparatively large degree of freedom, and also by using a small-size apparatus as the apparatus to be used for ordinary operations. The wide-range pattern at the registration may be used as a piece of large registration pattern, or is allowed to be managed in a unified manner by dividing into a plurality of smaller registration patterns for each part and treating as a set. In the latter case, if the size of the divided pattern is caused to be the same size as the pattern acquired by the authentication-use small-size apparatus, the smaller registration patterns can be registered by the small-size apparatus as well, and also, it becomes possible to accomplish a compatibility with the registration pattern acquired by the registration-specific apparatus. This allows accomplishment of hierarchical registration operation and management where the registration is easily executable by the small-size apparatus as well and the higher-accuracy registration is executable by the dedicated registration apparatus.
Also, the above-described mode of the fingertip guidance jigs is also applicable to the optical arrangement in the conventional finger-vein authentication apparatuses. In the conventional scheme, in order to image the ball side of the finger, the camera is disposed directly under the ball side. In the case of this imaging mode, between the case where the finger is placed from above and the case where the finger is placed from below, the acquired vein patterns merely differ from each other in their directions by 180°. Consequently, it is required only to have one type of the registration patterns. At the authentication, a one-time comparison is made between the acquired pattern and the registration pattern, and if these patterns do not coincide with each other, a comparison is made once again between the pattern acquired by being rotated and the registration pattern. If the patterns coincide with each other in either of these two-times comparisons, the personal identification can be regarded as being successfully accomplished.
In the above-described authentication apparatus illustrated in
As illustrated in
If the authentication apparatus of the present invention is set up onto a door handle of the automobile, it can be recognized at a point-in-time when the door is opened who has opened the door, so that settings similar to these personal settings are possible. In this case, from the stage of the lock release of the door, the registered person finds it possible to ride on the automobile even if the person does not have key at all. Moreover, time can be saved since, e.g., a setting modification intended for the registered person is performed while the door is opened. Since, in the apparatus of the present invention, the small-size implementation is accomplished by watching only the fingertip part, completely the same apparatus can be installed into both the door handle and the steering wheel. This feature makes it possible to make the registration pattern common thereto, thereby allowing basically the same authentication to be made based on the one-time registration in both the door handle and the steering wheel. Also, it is possible to share the processing apparatus for making the authentication, which, in this case, is capable of serving for a cost reduction as the system as a whole. In the case of the automobile, it is convenient that the door lock can be released by even a minor or a person with no diving license. From the safety's point-of-view, however, it is preferable that such persons other than persons having diving-qualification are prohibited from performing the driving-concerned operations. By setting up the authentication apparatus at the two locations in this way, it becomes possible to implement the following operation: Namely, a person having no driving qualification is requested and permitted to just open the door of the automobile anyway. After that, the person rides on the driving seat without making the authentication once again at the door, then making the authentication by the authentication apparatus of the steering wheel. In this way, the person shifts the automobile into a state of allowing starting of the engine or driving of the automobile. On this occasion, it is more advantageous, in some cases, to perform the personal settings, such as displacement of the seat position, after the authentication at the steering wheel has been completed. Also, by setting up the authentication apparatus at the two locations, it also becomes possible to implement an operation such that, e.g., the judgment criterion on the authentication when opening the door is relaxed, whereas the condition on the authentication concerning engine-starting at the steering wheel is made severer. This is because the door handle is positioned at an external circumstance, and thus has a possibility that the authentication becomes difficult to make due to a variety of fluctuation factors there. Otherwise, conversely, the following operation is also executable: Namely, in a case where a pattern which was registered by a person who had successfully made the authentication at the door handle at one time does not satisfy the coincidence condition with a pattern which is requested in the authentication at the steering wheel, if it is found to be close enough thereto, it is made possible to address a rough manner of the finger's placement by relaxing the judgment criterion, since the authentication had been successfully made at one time.
Also, the installment of the authentication apparatus into the steering wheel is preferable for a case where the personal identification is needed to be performed again during the driving. For example, in many cases, it is more advantageous that an ETC system for expressway-fee-payment/reception is usually set not to be used for crime prevention. It is possible, however, that the personal identification is made just before a tollgate during the driving to make the ETC effective and then the ETC is made ineffective immediately after that. Similarly, the authentication apparatus is usable as an accurate personal identification unit for the settlement in the case of shopping at a driving through or the like, or at the time of purchasing via communications such goods as music data or updated data for a car-navigation map.
Furthermore, the authentication apparatus of the present invention is used not only for the personal authentication, but also as button switches for calling for a variety of functions. When the button switches are disposed on the rear side of the handle usually, the driver cannot visually confirm what functions the button switches represent. Accordingly, only one single-function button switch can be disposed at one and the same location at most. In the finger-vein authentication, the patterns are completely different from each other for each finger even in the case of the same person. As a result, the authentication apparatus detects not the registered person, but the registered finger. The authentication apparatus permits the finger to be gropingly placed on a predetermined position by taking advantage of the above-described guidance jigs even if the authentication apparatus cannot be visually recognized, and this feature is basically the same for every finger. Then, a function is set up which makes it possible to freely call for functions in accordance with the requirements of an individual person after the authentication has been finished, the functions are, for example, the index finger calls for the immobilizer's release, the middle finger calls for the settlement's acknowledgement, and the ring finger calls for the music's reproduction. The set-up of this function allows a variety of functions to be easily called for by merely changing the fingers. When the plurality of button switches are arranged in a location incapable of visual recognition, the set-up of this function allows an arrangement capable of making an effective use of a location which is highly likely to be regarded as a dead space in the conventional concept, but has a good locational condition and easy to reach by hand. An example of such a location is the rear side of the steering, which was not usable because the button switches are highly likely to press in a mistaken manner. Also, a picture 602 of a hand and an icon 600 for indicating to which button switch what function is allocated in a simplified and symbolic manner are displayed on the part of instruments 502 illustrated in
Incidentally, when the authentication apparatus is used as the button switches, the authentication accuracy may be relaxed. For example, the following authentication-accuracy relaxation is allowable: The pattern is judged to coincide with a pattern which is judged to be the closest of the registered patterns, then calling for a function which is allocated to the finger corresponding to the pattern.
Incidentally, in the foregoing description, the explanation has been given concerning the conveniences obtained by setting up the authentication apparatus of the present invention onto such appliances as the steering wheel and the shift knob. The present invention, however, is not limited thereto. It is needless to say that the authentication apparatus may be set up wherever, e.g., a lever for operating a winker or wiper, and an arm rest inside the door.
For example, as illustrated in
Also, as illustrated in
Incidentally, in the above-described embodiment, the explanation has been given in the case of right-hand-drive automobile as its example. The present invention, however, is also applicable to a left-hand-drive automobile similarly. In this case, a symmetrical arrangement is also employable optionally.
It can be expected that the present invention will be applied to every field in which keys and personal identification numbers have been conventionally used.
It should be further understood by those skilled in the art that although the foregoing description has been made on embodiments of the invention, the invention is not limited thereto and various changes and modifications may be made without departing from the spirit of the invention and the scope of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2007-262845 | Oct 2007 | JP | national |