6533b832fe1ef96bd129a393

RESEARCH PRODUCT

A multimodal retina-iris biometric system using the Levenshtein distance for spatial feature comparison

Salvatore VitabileValerio Mario SalernoCarmelo MilitelloVincenzo ContiSabato Marco SiniscalchiLeonardo Rundo

subject

Biometric systemComputer scienceComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISIONspatial domain biometric featuresbiometric authentication system4603 Computer Vision and Multimedia Computation46 Information and Computing SciencesmedicineIris (anatomy)multimodal systemRetinabusiness.industrymultimodal retina-iris biometric systemLevenshtein distancePattern recognitionbiometric recognition systemQA75.5-76.95Levenshtein distanceretina and iris featuresmedicine.anatomical_structureFeature (computer vision)Electronic computers. Computer scienceSignal ProcessingComputer Vision and Pattern RecognitionArtificial intelligencebusinessSoftware

description

Abstract The recent developments of information technologies, and the consequent need for access to distributed services and resources, require robust and reliable authentication systems. Biometric systems can guarantee high levels of security and multimodal techniques, which combine two or more biometric traits, warranting constraints that are more stringent during the access phases. This work proposes a novel multimodal biometric system based on iris and retina combination in the spatial domain. The proposed solution follows the alignment and recognition approach commonly adopted in computational linguistics and bioinformatics; in particular, features are extracted separately for iris and retina, and the fusion is obtained relying upon the comparison score via the Levenshtein distance. We evaluated our approach by testing several combinations of publicly available biometric databases, namely one for retina images and three for iris images. To provide comprehensive results, detection error trade‐off‐based metrics, as well as statistical analyses for assessing the authentication performance, were considered. The best achieved False Acceptation Rate and False Rejection Rate indices were and 3.33%, respectively, for the multimodal retina‐iris biometric approach that overall outperformed the unimodal systems. These results draw the potential of the proposed approach as a multimodal authentication framework using multiple static biometric traits.

10.1049/bme2.12001https://dx.doi.org/10.1049/bme2.12001