Bio Metrics Security System Report
Bio Metrics Security System Report
Bio Metrics Security System Report
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page No.
ABSTRACT 1
1.1 INTRODUCTION 2
2. BIOMETRIC TECHNOLOGY 5
3. BIOMETRIC TYPES 7
4.4 APPLICATIONS 15
4.5 ADVANTAGES 17
4.6 DISADVANTAGES 17
5.2 ACCURACY 19
5.3 COST 20
6. BIOMETRICS APPLICATIONS 21
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6.2 GLOBAL DEVELOPMENTS 22
8. CONCLUSION 26
BIBLIOGRAPHY 27
2
ABSTRACT
With the increasing use of electronics and electronic commerce in our day-to-day lives, the
importance of fraud-proof identification and recognition systems for use in security
applications has grown .The improved understanding of biological systems and the ability
to model them using computer algorithms has led to utilization of biometrics in
authentication systems. Voice, Iris, Face, Signature, Hand Geometry are the biometrics that
have been studied and applied to various kinds of identification and authentication system.
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CHAPTER 1
BIOMETRICS - AN INTRODUCTION
1.1 INTRODUCTION
Biometrics is a rapidly evolving technology that facilitates the automatic identification of
an individual based on his or her physiological or behavioral characteristics.
These characteristics are referred to as biometric identifiers and are unique to each and
every one of us. Physiological or physical identifiers do not change overtime and include a
person’s fingerprint, facial features, iris, and retina patterns, along with geometric shape of
your hand. Behavioral identifiers do change over time or with mood and include a persons
voice, signature and the way one types at keyboard.
As networking grows, so does the number of electronic transactions used for both
conducting business and gathering information. This fact has led to realization that the
traditional methods involving passwords and pin numbers used to gain entry in these
networks, no longer provides adequate security against unauthorized access to sensitive
and / or personal data.
Users PIN and passwords can be forgotten and token-based ids such as smart cards,
employee badges, passports and drivers license can be lost, stolen or forged. Biometric
identification systems provide a solution to these problems, since they require the user to be
physically present at the point of identification and unique biometric identifiers are based on
who you are, as opposed to what you know or have in your possession.
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Figure 1 : Process involved in using a biometric system for
security
Capture the chosen biometric; Process the biometric and enroll the biometric template;
Store the template; Live-scan the chosen biometric; Process the biometric and extract the
biometric template.
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CHAPTER 2
BIOMETRIC TECHNOLOGY
FEATURE
EXTRACTION SMARTCARD
TRANSMISSION
IMAGE STORAGE
COMPRESSION
TRANSMISSION
EXPANSION
Data collection involves use of sensors to detect and measure individual’s physiological
or behavioral characteristics. The measured biometric must be unique and repeatable over
multiple measurements. However, technical parameters of sensors, as well as ergonomics of
device and the manner in which the biometric characteristics is presented to effect the
measurement,
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could eventually impact the outcome of the system. For instance, background noise and
acoustic of the environment may impact a speech recognition system, while the pressure
applied to the finger print scanner might also affect the data.
Not all biometric systems process and store data on the measuring device. Often
measurement is made using a relatively simple device to computer or server for processing
and/or storage. Depending on the system, data may be relatively large and thus would need
to be compressed for quick transfer. The compression algorithm needs to be selected
carefully; otherwise it could introduce some artifacts that could impact the decision process.
The signal processing subunit uses feature extraction algorithms to extract true biometric
information from the sample in the presence of noise introduced in the data collection and
transmission. Additional measurements are made if any flaw or corruption is noted, to
ensure good quality.
Pattern matching involves comparing the feature sample to a stored sample. (Biometric
data is stored locally on a biometric device, some central database/ server, or on a smart
card issued to users) The result of comparison is sent to the decision system to determine
the match.
The decision subsystem uses the statistical methods to confirm the authentication if
variance between the sample and template is within a certain threshold.
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CHAPTER 3
BIOMETRIC TYPES
Potentially capable of good accuracy , fingerprint devices can also suffer from usage
errors among insufficiently disciplined users such as might be the case with large user
bases. One must also consider the transducer user interface and how this would be affected
by large scale usage in a variety of environments. Fingerprint verification may be a good
choice for in house systems where adequate explanation and training can be provided to
users and where the system is operated within a controlled environment. It is not surprising
that the workstation access application area seems to be based almost exclusively around
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fingerprints, due to the relatively low cost, small size (easily integrated into keyboards) and
ease of integration.
An established technology where the unique patterns of the retina are scanned by a low
intensity light source via an optical coupler. Retinal scanning has proved to be quite
accurate in use but does require the user to look into a receptacle and focus on a live of the
eye related biometrics. It utilises a fairly conventional ccd camera element and requires no
intimate contact between user and reader. In addition it has the potential for higher than
average template matching performance. It has been demonstrated to work with spectacles
in place and with a variety of ethnic groups and is one of the few devices, which can work
well in identification mode. Ease of use and system integration have not traditionally been
strong points with the iris scanning devices, but we can expect to see improvements in these
areas as new products are introduced.
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Signature verification analyzes the way a user signs his/her name. Signing features such
as speed, velocity, and pressure are as important as the finished signature's static shape.
Signature verification enjoys a synergy with existing processes that other biometrics do not.
People are used to signatures as a means of transaction-related identity verification, and
most would see nothing unusual in extending this to encompass biometrics. Signature
verification devices are reasonably accurate in operation and obviously lend themselves to
applications where a signature is an accepted identifier. Surprisingly, relatively few
significant signature applications have emerged compared with other biometric
methodologies. But if your application fits, it is a technology worth considering.
Hand geometry involves analyzing and measuring the shape of the hand. These
biometric offers a good balance of performance characteristics and are relatively easy to
use. It might be suitable where there are more users or where users access the system
infrequently and are perhaps less disciplined in their approach to the system.
Accuracy can be very high if desired and flexible performance tuning and configuration
can accommodate a wide range of applications. Organizations are using hand geometry
readers in various scenarios, including time and attendance recording. Ease of integration
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into other systems and processes, coupled with ease of use, and makes hand geometry an
obvious first step for many biometric projects.
Smart protector allows software products to be simply and effectively protective against
piracy. Part of application code, completely developed in VB 6.0 is recompiled and
transferred at run time executed into a smart card where, due to physical protection, it is in
accessible .Smart protector makes it possible also for developers who are not expert of
smart card technology to set up, in a very short time, protected and non duplicable software
applications.
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CHAPTER 4
DETAIL ANALYSIS OF BIOMETRIC
SECURITY SYSTEM USING IRIS SCANNING
An eye is the size of a ping –pong light enters the eye through the pupil, and travels through
the lens and the vitreous body to that optic nerve. The optic nerve carries the image of the
brain for interpretation. The eye has three chambers known as anterior (front), posterior
(back), and the vitreous body. The iris is located at the back end of the anterior chamber.
The front chamber contains aqueous humor (a watery fluid). This fluid carries nutrients
to different tissues in front of the eye. The cornea is located at the front of this chamber; the
cornea is the clear part of the eye. The lens is located at the front of the posterior (back)
chamber and is directly behind the iris. This chamber contains a thick gel-like fluid called
vitreous humor. This fluid helps to maintain the shape of the eye.
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An iris based biometric involves analyzing features found in the colored ring of tissue that
surrounds the pupil. Iris scanning, uses a fairly conventional camera element and requires
no close contact between the user and the reader. In addition, it has the potential for
higher than average template -matching performance. Iris biometrics work with glasses in
place.
Iris scanning is undoubtedly the less intrusive of the eye related biometrics. It utilizes a
fairly conventional CCD camera element and requires no intimate contact between user and
reader .It has been demonstrated to work with spectacles in place and with a variety of
ethnic groups and is one of the few devices, which can work well in identification mode.
A typical iris scan takes about 30 sec to do and only about two seconds for verification
each time thereafter, a camera located about three feet from the subject focuses on and scans
the iris from one side and converts this scan into a template i.e. stored for future use.
The final template is based upon unique visible qualities of the iris.
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The iris has about 266 unique “spots” that are used in template construction, versus an
average of 13-60 spots employed in another biometric technologies. This is encoded into
512 byte digitized record code known as IRISCODE. It is stored as hexadecimal code in
database & can be used in verification at some access point.
More over, any differences between a person’s right and left eyes are statically insignificant
so it does not even matter which one is photographed.
The error rate with iris scanning is 1 in 1.2 million and the odds of two irises having the
same codes is 1 in 10^52. This said, iris scanning is so accurate that
the entire planet could be enrolled in an iris database and there would still be only marginal
chance of a false identification. Even if a person is blinking at the scan and 2/3 of the iris is
blocked, the error rate is still an impressive 1 in 100,000 (or the scan can be redone in under
a minute).
Whilst individual biometric devices ans systems have their own operating methodology,
there are some generalizations one can make as to what typically happens within a
biometric systems implementation.
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[A] TEMPLATE
[B] STORAGE
[C] VERIFICATION
The verification process requires the user to claim an identity by either entering a PIN
or presenting a token, and then verify this claim by providing the live biometric to be
compared against the claimed reference template. There will be a resulting match or no
match accordingly.
4.4 APPLICATIONS
1. Algorithms developed by John Daugman at Cambridge are today the basis for all iris
recognition systems worldwide.
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2. In America and Japan, the main applications have been entry control, ATMs, and
government programs.
4. Many airports worldwide have recently installed these algorithms for passenger
screening and immigration control, including Heathrow, Schiphol, Frankfurt, and
Charlotte airports.
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Figure 7 : An AUTHENTICAM Used for iris scanning
4.5 ADVANTAGES
4.6 DISADVANTAGES
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CHAPTER 5
SELECTING BIOMETRIC TECHNOLOGY
Biometric technology is one area that no segment of the IT industry can afford to ignore.
Biometrics provides security benefits across the spectrum, from IT vendors to end users,
and from security system developers to security system users. Different technologies may
be appropriate for different applications, depending on perceived user profiles, the need to
interface with other systems or databases, environmental conditions, and a host of other
application-specific parameters.
Hand
Characteristic Fingerprints Retina Iris Face Signature Voice
Geometry
Ease of Use High High Low Medium Medium High High
Lighting,
Noise,
Dryness, dirt, Hand Poor age, Changing
Error incidence Glasses colds,
age injury, age Lighting glasses, signatures
weather
hair
Very
Accuracy High High Very High High High High
High
Cost * * * * * * *
User acceptance Medium Medium Medium Medium Medium Medium High
Required security
High Medium High Very High Medium Medium Medium
level
Long-term
High Medium High High Medium Medium Medium
stability
*The large number of factors involved makes a simple cost comparison
impractical.
Some biometric devices are not user friendly. For example, users without proper training
may experience difficulty aligning their head with a device for enrolling and matching
facial templates.
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5.2 ACCURACY
Vendors often use two different methods to rate biometric accuracy: false-acceptance rate or
false-rejection rate. Both methods focus on the system's ability to allow limited entry to
authorized users. However, these measures can vary significantly, depending on how you
adjust the sensitivity of the mechanism that matches the biometric. For example, you can
require a tighter match between the measurements of hand geometry and the user's template.
This will probably decrease the false-acceptance rate, but at the same time can increase the
false-rejection rate. So be careful to understand how vendors arrive at quoted values of FAR
and FRR.
False accept rates (FAR) indicate the likelihood that an impostor may be falsely
accepted by the system.
False reject rates (FRR) indicate the likelihood that the genuine user may be rejected by
the system.
Because FAR and FRR are interdependent, it is more meaningful to plot them against
each other, as shown in figure. Each point on the plot represents a hypothetical system's
performance at various sensitivity settings. With such a
plot, you can compare these rates to determine the crossover error rate. The lower the CER,
the more accurate the system.
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Figure 9 : Crossover error rate attempts to combine two measures of
biometric accuracy
5.3 COST
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CHAPTER 6
BIOMETRICS APPLICATIONS
Axis Software, Pune, deals in fingerprint, iris and face recognition technology
and is planning to add voice recognition technology to its range of voice authentication
products and systems. The axis system stores biometric records in an encrypted template in
digital form. The record by itself is of no use to a stealer and cannot be reconstructed to
reveal a persons identity to someone else.
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6.2 GLOBAL DEVELOPMENTS
Biometric smart cards: Polaroid and Atmel have developed secure identity
cards that merge ultra-secure smart cards, fingerprint verification, biometric identification,
and digital imaging. These cards will be used in ecommerce, online, remote access, and any
it environment where authentication is required.
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CHAPTER 7
THE FUTURE OF BIOMETRICS
There are many views concerning potential biometric applications, some popular examples
being.
Most of the leading banks have been experimenting with biometrics for ATM machine
use and as a general means of combating card fraud. Surprisingly, these experiments have
rarely consisted of carefully integrated devices into a common process, as could easily be
achieved with certain biometric devices. Previous comments in this paper concerning user
psychology come to mind here and one wonders why wehave not seen a more professional
and carefully considered implementation from this sector. The banks will of course have a
view concerning the level of fraud and the cost of combating it via a technology solution
such as biometrics. They will also express concern about potentially alienating customers
with such an approach. However, it still surprises many in the biometric industry that the
banks and financial institutions have so far failed to embrace this technology with any
enthusiasm.
There are many in this industry who have the vision of a multi application card for
travelers which, incorporating a biometric, would enable them to participate in various
frequent flyer and border control systems as well as paying for their air ticket, hotel room,
hire care etc., all with one convenient token.
Technically this is eminently possible, but from a political and commercial point of
view there are still many issues to resolve, not the least being who would own the card, be
responsible for administration and so on. These may not be insurmountable problems and
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perhaps we may see something along these lines emerge. A notable challenge in this respect
would be packaging such an initiative in a way that would be truly attractive for users.
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CHAPTER 8
CONCLUSION
The security requirements of the future require a much higher level of physical verification
and attention to increasingly sophisticated fraud and electronic hacking. Smart ID cards
provide this ultra high level of security in the familiar ID card format everyone is used to.
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
[4] www.biometric.com
[5] www.bioventric.com
[6] http://homepage.ntlworld.com/avanti
[7] http://www.ibia.org
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