CVAug 21, 2024

On Missing Scores in Evolving Multibiometric Systems

arXiv:2408.11271v11 citationsh-index: 71
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses a practical issue in biometric systems for security applications, but it is incremental as it extends previous work to both verification and identification tasks with higher missing data proportions.

The study tackled the problem of missing scores in evolving multibiometric systems by applying score imputation methods, showing that iterative imputation with K nearest neighbors improves recognition accuracy even with up to 90% missing scores.

The use of multiple modalities (e.g., face and fingerprint) or multiple algorithms (e.g., three face comparators) has shown to improve the recognition accuracy of an operational biometric system. Over time a biometric system may evolve to add new modalities, retire old modalities, or be merged with other biometric systems. This can lead to scenarios where there are missing scores corresponding to the input probe set. Previous work on this topic has focused on either the verification or identification tasks, but not both. Further, the proportion of missing data considered has been less than 50%. In this work, we study the impact of missing score data for both the verification and identification tasks. We show that the application of various score imputation methods along with simple sum fusion can improve recognition accuracy, even when the proportion of missing scores increases to 90%. Experiments show that fusion after score imputation outperforms fusion with no imputation. Specifically, iterative imputation with K nearest neighbors consistently surpasses other imputation methods in both the verification and identification tasks, regardless of the amount of scores missing, and provides imputed values that are consistent with the ground truth complete dataset.

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