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English
Academic Press Inc.(London) Ltd
13 January 2017
Human Recognition in Unconstrained Environments provides a unique picture of the complete ‘in-the-wild’ biometric recognition processing chain; from data acquisition through to detection, segmentation, encoding, and matching reactions against security incidents.

Coverage includes:

Data hardware architecture fundamentals

Background subtraction of humans in outdoor scenes

Camera synchronization

Biometric traits: Real-time detection and data segmentation

Biometric traits: Feature encoding / matching

Fusion at different levels

Reaction against security incidents

Ethical issues in non-cooperative biometric recognition in public spaces

With this book readers will learn how to:

Use computer vision, pattern recognition and machine learning methods for biometric recognition in real-world, real-time settings, especially those related to forensics and security

Choose the most suited biometric traits and recognition methods for uncontrolled settings

Evaluate the performance of a biometric system on real world data

Edited by:   , , , , , , ,
Imprint:   Academic Press Inc.(London) Ltd
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 191mm,  Spine: 16mm
Weight:   670g
ISBN:   9780081007051
ISBN 10:   0081007051
Pages:   248
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
1. Iris Recognition on Mobile Devices Using Near-Infrared Images 2. Face recognition using dictionary learning and domain adaptation 3. Periocular Recognition in Non-ideal Images 4. Real Time 3D Face-Ear Recognition on Mobile Devices: New Scenarios for 3D Biometricks “in-the-Wild” 5. Fingerphoto Recognition in Outdoor Environment using Smartphones 6. Soft biometric labels in the wild. Case study on gender classification 7. Unconstrained data acquisition frameworks and protocols 8. Biometric Authentication to Access Controlled Areas through Eye Tracking 9. Non-cooperative biometrics: Cross-Jurisdictional concerns 10. Pattern Recognition and Machine Learning Methods for assessing the quality of fingerprints

"Maria De Marsico is Associate Professor at Sapienza University of Rome, Department of Computes Science. She got her Master degree in Computer science from University of Salerno. Her scientific interests focus on Image Processing and Human Computer Interaction. Regarding the first one, she works on biometric recognition, including face, iris, gate, and multimodal recognition. Regarding the second one, she is especially interested in multimodal interaction, accessibility for users with special needs, and advanced techniques for personalized distance learning. She is Associate Editor of Pattern Recognition Letters, and Area Editor of the IEEE Biometrics Compendium. She published about 100 scientific works in international journals, conferences, and book chapters. She has been member of many Technical program Committees and is referee for several top journals, and Program Chair for the International Conference on Pattern Recognition Applications and Methods since 2013. Michele Nappi received the laurea degree (cum laude) in computer science from the University of Salerno, Salerno, Italy, in 1991, the M.Sc. degree in information and communication technology from I.I.A.S.S. ""E.R. Caianiello"", Vietri sul Mare, Salerno, and the Ph.D. degree in applied mathematics and computer science from the University of Padova, Padova, Italy. He is currently an Associate Professor of computer science at the University of Salerno.His research interests include Multibiometric Systems, Pattern Recognition, Image Processing, Compression and Indexing, Multimedia Databases, Human-Computer Interaction, VR/AR. He co-authored over 120 papers in international conference, peer review journals and book chapters in these fields (see http://www.informatik.uni-trier.de/~ley/pers/hd/n/Nappi:Michele.html). He also served as Guest Editor for several international journals and as Editor for International Books. In 2014 He was one of the founders of the spin off BS3 (Biometric System for Security and Safety). President of the Italian Chapter of the IEEE Biometrics Council (2015-2017), member of IAPR and IEEE, He is team leader of the Biometric and Image Processing Lab (BIPLAB). Dr. Nappi received several international awards for scientific and research activities. Hugo Proença B.Sc. (2001), M.Sc. (2004), Ph.D. (2007) and Habilitation (Agregado, 2016) is an Associate Professor and the current Head of the Department (2015-2017) of Computer Science, University of Beira Interior. He has been researching mainly about biometrics and visual-surveillance, particularly in developing human recognition solutions able to work in degraded data, resulting from unconstrained data acquisition protocols. He is an associate editor of the Image and Vision Computing Journal, the coordinating editor of the IEEE Biometrics Council Newsletter and the area editor (ocular biometrics) of the IEEE Biometrics Compendium Journal. Also, he is a member of the Editorial Board of the International Journal of Biometrics and served as Guest Editor of special issues of the Pattern Recognition Letters, Image and Vision Computing and Signal, Image and Video Processing journals."

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