The invention relates to a sensor system for recording a hand vein pattern and a method for recording a hand vein pattern.
Sensors for recording hand vein patterns, whose signals are used for an identification, are known from the prior art.
The problem of the present invention is that of providing an improved sensor system and an improved method for recording hand vein patterns.
This problem is solved according to a first aspect of the invention by a sensor system, which comprises a light source, a camera, a topography sensor and a processor unit. The first light source is designed to emit electromagnetic waves in the near-infrared range over the entire surface, which waves can be reflected by the veins of a hand. The camera comprises a camera chip and is designed and arranged to record reflection signals of electromagnetic waves such that it is capable of receiving radiation reflected by a hand when the sensor system is in operation. The camera is moreover designed to process the recorded reflection signals into corresponding image data. When it is in operation, the topography sensor is designed and arranged in such a way that it records topography data of the hand. The processor unit is connected to the camera chip and the topography sensor and is designed to calculate a normalized vein pattern of the hand from the image data and the topography data.
According to a second aspect, the invention relates to a method for recording a hand vein pattern. The process comprises the steps: irradiating a hand with a first light source that emits electromagnetic waves in the near-infrared range over the entire surface, which waves can be reflected by the veins in a hand; recording reflection signals of the veins; generating corresponding image data from the reflection signals; recording topography data of the hand and generating a normalized vein pattern of the hand or a feature vector corresponding to the vein pattern from the image data and the topography data.
The invention includes the finding that a vein pattern in a normal position can be calculated by combining topography data and the recorded vein pattern, and the vein pattern output by the sensor system is therefore independent of the position and spread of the hand in relation to the sensor system.
According to the invention, the processor unit combines the topography data and the vein pattern in such a way that it is possible to calculate a normalized vein pattern and a normalized hand geometry image, that is, a normalized topography of the hand. Hence, this is a position normalization in space. Hand geometry and vein branching are both spatial structures, the 2-D imaging of which on a camera chip depends on its spatial position (rotation, tilt, curvature, etc.). In this way, a vein detection system can be constructed, which is tolerant with respect to hand position and which does not require any mechanical supports for the hand.
The device according to the invention and the method according to the invention can be used both for vein patterns of the palm and the vein patterns of the back of the hand.
Embodiments of the sensor system according to the invention and the method according to the invention will be described below. The additional features of the embodiments can be combined to create further embodiments, unless the description explicitly describes them as alternatives to each other.
In a preferred embodiment, the sensor system has an additional processor unit that is designed to compare the vein pattern calculated by the first processor unit or the calculated feature vector with at least one stored vein pattern or with at least one stored feature vector, and to classify the calculated vein pattern or the calculated feature vector as sufficiently consistent or not sufficiently consistent. Using the normalized vein pattern, a classification can thus be carried out, regardless of the position and spread of the hand.
An advantageous embodiment of a sensor system is one comprising a second light source, which emits the electromagnetic radiation in the infrared range in the form of a structure image, a second camera chip for recording reflection signals of electromagnetic waves and a calculating unit, which is designed to calculate the recorded reflection data of a topography. The second light source sends a structured light image, for example one having a stripe or dot structure, and projects this light image onto the hand. The reflected structure image is then imaged on the camera chip. The camera chip signal of this image depends both on the structure of the palm (curvature) and on the position of the hand in space (rotation, tilt). By recording with the structured light using the calculating unit, it is possible to identify the position by calculating triangulation equations and to reverse-calculate the structure image to the standard position or to convert it to a feature vector and to provide a comparison at a later time. In the first processor unit, a normalized vein pattern can then be calculated, using the position information thus obtained. The sensor system preferably has a camera chip which functions as both the first and the second camera chip.
In an advantageous embodiment, the first light source and the second light source alternately send electromagnetic waves in immediate succession from image to image or partial images, such that a complete vein image (first light source) and a structure image (second light source) are recorded in immediate succession.
The first processor unit is advantageously designed to calculate, in an idle mode of the sensor system in which only the second light source emits electromagnetic waves at regular time intervals of, e.g., 1 to 2 seconds, a distance from the reflection signal, and to start an irradiation with the first light source if it falls below a predetermined minimum distance. This allows for an efficient operation of the system, since the irradiation with the first light source and calculations are carried out only when an object is located in the irradiated area.
In an alternative embodiment, the topography sensor is a time-of-flight sensor. It determines the distance of an object from the sensor for each pixel by capturing the return time of the infrared light pulse and by calculating the distance using the speed of light.
It is advantageous if the additional processor unit is an RFID (radio frequency identification) host processor and the comparison takes place with a vein pattern or feature vector stored in an RFID slave processor. In this case, a classification is only possible if a connecting channel has been established between the RFID host processor and an RFID slave processor. This allows an identification without storing data in a database system and thus ensures greater security, since both the valid vein pattern and the RFID slave processor must exist in the sensor system for an identification.
Alternatively, another type of connection processor, which realizes at least one active wireless connection capability, preferably according to the known standards WLAN, Bluetooth, ZigBee or NFC, may take the place of the RFID host processor. In this case, the slave processor is also equipped with at least the same active wireless connection capability as the host processor. As described with regard to RFID, the comparison takes place with a vein pattern or feature vector stored in the slave processor.
The comparison with vein patterns or feature vectors that are stored in a database is however also of advantage. In this case, not every user must be equipped with an additional identification element; rather, the user can make the classification on the basis of the already existing pattern.
One advantageous embodiment has a release unit that is associated with the sensor system, which makes it possible to give access to a downstream system with a vein pattern or feature vector classified as sufficiently consistent, for example to a banking system or other input system. But access rights, for example to buildings or public transport facilities, can also be advantageously issued by the release unit.
A further development of the invention relates to a bracelet with an integrated slave processor, in which the slave processor contains information about a stored vein pattern or a stored feature vector and is able to communicate with a host processor of the sensor system described.
In one embodiment, the slave processor is an integrated RFID slave processor, in which the RFID slave processor contains information about a stored vein pattern or a stored feature vector and is able to communicate with an RFID host processor of the sensor system described.
An alternative to the aforementioned bracelet with integrated RFID slave processor may also be a bracelet with an active slave processor, in other words, an actively powered processor which has a stored vein pattern or a feature vector and an active wireless connection capability, preferably according to one of the known standards WLAN, Bluetooth, ZigBee or NFC. Here, the active slave processor is designed in such a way that the stored vein pattern or the stored feature vector cannot be read without permission; preferably a TEE (Trusted Execution Environment) may be used for the purpose.
As an alternative, so-called smart watches or smart bracelets could be used (smart watch; smart wristband, wearable wristband, etc.). Smart watches or bracelets are referred to as wrist-wearable computers, which have short-distance wireless connection capabilities and can transmit specific messages to their users.
The user, who at the same time is the wearer of this smart bracelet, is permitted access to the desired system without having to reveal his person. This aspect is essential from a data protection point of view.
If the user approaches an access point containing the sensor system and places his hand, on which he also wears the bracelet, in front of the sensor system, the sensor is activated. The RFID host processor or the active host processor sends the calculated vein pattern or the feature vector to the bracelet via the established RF channel or wireless channel. This is followed by the identification mechanism already described.
In such a system application, the bracelet may be used, for example, as a bank card, a monthly pass for local travel, a ticket for long-distance travel, a boarding pass for air travel or as an identification for access authorization.
It is a particular advantage of the described bracelet that even the loss of a smart bracelet does not create the potential for abuse. The bracelet can only be used in conjunction with the hand vein pattern. But because personally identifying data is not stored on the bracelet, a lost bracelet is worthless.
The slave processor, in particular the RFID slave processor or the active slave processor, may also contain an additional code, which can only be read or sent as sufficiently consistent after a calculated vein pattern or feature vector has been identified.
In a further development of the invention, the sensor system is installed via a keyboard. Here, a vein pattern on the back of the hand is detected, which makes simple identification possible, even during an input operation. The second processor unit of the sensor system is configured and connected to the keyboard in such a way that, whenever a key is pressed, a verification process of the vein pattern can simultaneously be triggered. Entering the character or a group of characters will only be recognized as valid if the vein verification is detected as sufficiently consistent. The advantage of such an arrangement is that a permanent authentication of the user in a communication process, for example with a computer, can be guaranteed.
Equally advantageously, the sensor system may also be integrated in a keyboard and utilize a vein pattern of the palm for identification. Here, the keyboard is designed such that the heels of the hand always hover above the part of the keyboard facing the user, or they may even rest on it, while the fingers can reach the keys. A deliberately narrow arrangement of the keys is thus selected. Number keys or other function keys are arranged either to the right or left of the letter keys. In the part of the keyboard facing the user, a sensor system according to the invention can be integrated either for the left or the right hand. The sensor system is preferably designed in such a way that it can detect the vein structure from a very short distance to the palm; it is capable of capturing the palm having an area of up to 120 mm at a distance from the sensor surface of 5 mm to 20 mm. In one embodiment, the sensor system comprises a plurality of first infrared light sources that are embedded in the computer keyboard in such a way that each first IR light source illuminates the entire surface of a section of the palm. This embodiment moreover comprises a plurality of camera chips, and the reflection signals of the respective sections of the palm, that is, sections of the hand vein pattern, are thus imaged on each of the camera chips. The arrangement of the camera chips and the IR light sources is selected such that the combination of all images of the camera chips creates a substantially complete image of the palm. This complete image is then supplied to a processing course in order to determine the vein pattern template. The arrangement of a plurality of camera chips results from the necessity of the very short object-image distance. When only one camera chip is used, it may potentially happen that the palm cannot be optically recorded in its entirety, and a complete image of the vein pattern can therefore not be made available for processing.
Further embodiments of the method according to the invention and the device according to the invention will be explained below by means of the figures. They show:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2013 208 654.7 | May 2013 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2014/059058 | 5/5/2014 | WO | 00 |