Thursday, 9 October 2008

Biometrics

What is “biometrics”?

Biometrics is a field of security and identification technology based on the measurement of unique physical characteristics such as fingerprints, retinal patterns, and facial structure. To verify an individual's identity, biometric devices scan certain characteristics and compare them with a stored entry in a computer database. While the technology goes back years and has been used in highly sensitive institutions such as defense and nuclear facilities, the proliferation of electronic data exchange generated new demand for biometric applications that can secure electronically stored data and online transactions.

Biometrics is the practice of automatically identifying people by one or more physical characteristics.

TYPES OF BIOMETRIC SYSTEMS

FINGERPRINTS.
Fingerprint-based biometric systems scan the dimensions, patterns, and topography of fingers, thumbs, and palms. The most common biometric in forensic and governmental databases, fingerprints contain up to 60 possibilities for minute variation, and extremely large and increasingly integrated networks of these stored databases already exist. The largest of these is the Federal Bureau of Investigation's (FBI) Automated Fingerprint Identification System, with more than 630 million fingerprint images.

FACIAL RECOGNITION.
Facial recognition systems vary according to the features they measure. Some look at the shadow patterns under a set lighting pattern, while others scan heat patterns or thermal images using an infrared camera that illuminates the eyes and cheekbones. These systems are powerful enough to scope out the minutest differences in facial patterns, even between identical twins. The hardware for facial recognition systems is relatively inexpensive, and is increasingly installed in computer monitors.

EYE SCANS.
There are two main features of the eye that are targeted by biometric systems: the retina and the iris. Each contains more points of identification than a fingerprint. Retina scanners trace the pattern of blood cells behind the retina by quickly flashing an infrared light into the eye. Iris scanners create a unique biological bar code by scanning the eye's distinctive color patterns. Eye scans tend to occupy less space in a computer and thus operate relatively quickly, although some users are squeamish about having beams of light shot into their eyes.

VOICE VERIFICATION.
Although voices can sound similar and can be consciously altered, the topography of the mouth, teeth, and vocal cords produces distinct pitch, cadence, tone, and dynamics that give away would-be impersonators. Widely used in phone-based identification systems, voice-verification biometrics also is used with personal computers.

HAND GEOMETRY.
Hand-geometry biometric systems take two infrared photographs—one from the side and one from above—of an individual's hand. These images measure up to 90 different characteristics, such as height, width, thickness, finger shape, and joint positions and compare them with stored data.

KEYSTROKE DYNAMICS.
A biometric system that is tailor-made for personal computers, keystroke-dynamic biometrics measures unique patterns in the way an individual uses a keyboard—such as speed, force, the variation of force on different parts of the keyboard, and multiple-key functions—and exploits them as a means of identification.

These things are indeed very interesting, and it would be better if I would explain each and every types in details to all of you...

No comments: