Biometric system in homeland security context
Abstract
The mission of homeland security is ensuring the safety of living communities and protecting
citizens from unforeseen events. In this research field, intelligent and advanced systems are
extremely useful to prevent from tragic epilogues. Homeland security systems aim at
supporting humans in those continuous and tiring activities of monitoring and detecting
dangerous situations occurring in a surveilled area. Fatigue and distraction can reduce the
human attention over time and be the cause of risks for safety and security. This thesis
highlights the recent advances in this field and proposes some contributions on the
state-of-the-art to deal with difficulties of the homeland security issues. The work focuses on
a specific perspective view of the problem consisting in the use of biometrics to detect and
recognize individuals. The biometric traits explored in this work are both hard biometrics, i.e.
the face, and soft biometrics, i.e. the gait. Face is traditionally and widely used as a strong
biometric trait for recognition and authentication. A reliable and robust face biometric
recognizer is based on the assumption that facial features are good in quality and number.
This is achieved when the face is detected in collaborative conditions and the pose is ideal
to extract the features. The pose of the face is not always frontal therefore a preprocessing
phase of facial recognition involves the estimation of the pose of an acquired face. As a
contribution to the state-of-the-art of head pose estimation, three different methods have
been proposed that encode the face thanks to the use of facial landmarks and extract the
pose.
The features extracted from the face can be both static and dynamic. With static facial
features we extract information from a face if its identity is not known. Dynamic facial
features relate to lip movement and lip recognition.
The landmarks that define the skeleton have been extracted from a series of videos of
people walking; this made it possible to study the gait and classify people on the basis of
gender and on the basis of their "cooperativeness", that is the aptitude to support the
camera or to try to escape it.
The results obtained and discussed in this thesis are strongly linked to the concepts of
security, surveillance and trust and therefore may serve as insights to further explore the
strengths and the limitations of software solutions applied to homeland security. [edited by Author]