CVOct 8, 2014

Deep Representations for Iris, Face, and Fingerprint Spoofing Detection

arXiv:1410.1980v3471 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses security vulnerabilities in biometric authentication systems, though it is incremental as it builds on existing deep learning methods.

The paper tackled the problem of biometric spoofing detection by developing deep learning systems for iris, face, and fingerprint modalities, achieving state-of-the-art results in eight out of nine benchmarks.

Biometrics systems have significantly improved person identification and authentication, playing an important role in personal, national, and global security. However, these systems might be deceived (or "spoofed") and, despite the recent advances in spoofing detection, current solutions often rely on domain knowledge, specific biometric reading systems, and attack types. We assume a very limited knowledge about biometric spoofing at the sensor to derive outstanding spoofing detection systems for iris, face, and fingerprint modalities based on two deep learning approaches. The first approach consists of learning suitable convolutional network architectures for each domain, while the second approach focuses on learning the weights of the network via back-propagation. We consider nine biometric spoofing benchmarks --- each one containing real and fake samples of a given biometric modality and attack type --- and learn deep representations for each benchmark by combining and contrasting the two learning approaches. This strategy not only provides better comprehension of how these approaches interplay, but also creates systems that exceed the best known results in eight out of the nine benchmarks. The results strongly indicate that spoofing detection systems based on convolutional networks can be robust to attacks already known and possibly adapted, with little effort, to image-based attacks that are yet to come.

Foundations

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