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In Your Face I.D.
We've now reached a hi-tech point where computers can recognize us by our
faces. Just like you can pick out people that you know in a crowd, a computer
with a camera can now do the same thing. With just a mere glimpse of your face
- you could be found and identified while you're walking on the street, driving
your car, on the job or in a stadium filled with thousands of people.
An amazing new technology that allows computers and cameras to recognize our
faces is opening a new frontier where your face becomes your password and
criminals can be caught merely by showing their faces on the street. You
think about how we recognize each other-- It's by our faces. Now, computers can
be programmed to do the same thing. If your facial image is on file, a computer
with a camera could pick you out of a crowd. Police see it as a way to cut down
crime and the state of Illinois is using this technology. But how far can this
go when your I.D. is in your face?
Chances are you're not even aware of it. If you've renewed your Illinois
driver's license recently, the photo session is about more than getting a new
picture of yourself for your wallet. Your face is being stored.
In an array of computer servers in Springfield, your facial image is
somewhere among 8 million others. And these computers are searching for your
face to see if you really are who you say you are. "What it provides for
us is pretty quick identification of persons who are the same person who
pretend to be different persons," said Beth Langen, IL Sec. Of State's
Office.
Illinois is among a handful of states now using facial recognition
technology to stop driver's license fraud. It's nabbing hundreds
of people already. It works by finding the visible landmarks on
your face and then creating a mathematical computation, based
upon those features, unique to you. Visage Technology, based outside
of Boston, is one of the companies that has developed this. "Our
cameras have to be able to catch both eyes. Once we capture that,
we can analyze the face," said Gretchen Lewis, Visage Technology,
Inc. This is the same company that was there at the super bowl
in Tampa, capturing the faces of every fan that came to the game,
looking for criminals in the crowd. That certainly raised some
eyebrows.
"There's something repugnant about catching someone's digital image. I
think this society's willing to take some risks to have anonymity," said
John Roberts, ACLU Florida.
"I go into the 7-11, McDonald's, bank, gas station, I have my picture
taken. Not only taken, but stored. With our technology, bouncing
it against a database, if there's no match, it's being dropped
immediately," said Tom Colatosti, Visage Technology, Inc.
It does create the possibility that you could be under surveillance with
your facial image being captured and analyzed, simply as you walk down the
street. It's not happening yet here in Chicago.
But it is happening in London, England. This is the borough of Newham in
London's east end. It's an area that's had a relatively high crime rate in
years past. But now, there are extra eyes watching what's going on here. The
extra eyes are in the form of surveillance cameras. In some neighborhoods there
are more than 300 cameras on poles, etc? So chances are, when you're walking on
the streets of Newham: someone is watching you. Those doing the watching are
local government employees and police officers. "What we have seen is an
incredible drop-off of crime in the area," said Bob Lack, Newham emergency
services director. That's not surprising, because it appears the cameras are
everywhere: watching people on the sidewalks, on the streets, in the parking
lots, in the lobbies of buildings, and even capturing the license plate numbers
of cars passing by.
"To stop crime, so they can surveillance people, catch people doing
things they shouldn't be doing," said Charlene Whitehorne, resident of
Newham. And the police are getting a "heads-up" on crime, because the
cameras and computers can pick the faces of known criminals out of the crowds.
"They are targeting a very small minority of people who are responsible
for a large amount of crime in the area," said Tim Pidgeon, Visionics Inc.
"You don't think: everywhere I go someone's watching, but it's nice to
know if something did happen here they'd be caught," said Jane Harvey,
resident. And it's catching on in the United States.
A number of casinos, including some in the Chicago area, are using security
cameras and this 'face-grabbing' technology to watch out for cheaters and track
them if they return. The immigration and naturalization service has tested a
similar system that it could use for passport control or border control, but
it's put future plans for the technology on hold for now.
But down in Tampa, Florida, they are talking about using it in their nightclub
area called your city. This is an area already blanketed by many
security cameras. If computerized facial recognition is added,
anyone with a criminal record simply out on the streets - could
be a marked man. "If you haven't committed a crime, and you're
not intent on committing a crime, you don't have a problem,"
said Bob Buckhorn, Tampa city councilman. "One could make
the same argument in response to a search of someone's home without
a warrant," said Colleen Connell, ACLU Illinois.
It's the worries about Big Brother that have civil libertarians saying that
the guidelines and laws need to be set now, before this technology moves into
many areas of our lives. You could buy products, do your banking, and enter
your home merely by showing your face to a camera. But if all those activities
are being tracked and monitored by someone, where can you find privacy?
Applications of Face Recognition Systems
Face recognition systems are no longer limited to identity verification and
surveillance tasks. Growing numbers of applications are starting to use
face-recognition as the initial step towards interpreting human actions,
intention, and behavior, as a central part of next-generation smart
environments. Many of the actions and behaviors humans display can only be
interpreted if you also know the person's identity, and the identity of the
people around them. Examples are a valued repeat customer entering a store, or
behavior monitoring in an eldercare or childcare facility, and
command-and-control interfaces in a military or industrial setting. In each of
these applications identity information is crucial in order to provide machines
with the background knowledge needed to interpret measurements and observations
of human actions.
Face Recognition for Smart Environments
Researchers today are actively building smart environments (i.e. visual,
audio, and haptic interfaces to environments such as rooms, cars, and office
desks). In these applications a key goal is usually to give machines perceptual
abilities that allow them to function naturally with people -- to recognize the
people and remember their preferences and peculiarities, to know what they are
looking at, and to interpret their words, gestures, and unconscious cues such
as vocal prosody and body language. Researchers are using these
perceptually-aware devices to explore applications in health care,
entertainment, and collaborative work. Recognition of facial expression is an
important example of how face recognition interacts with other smart
environment capabilities. It is important that a smart system knows whether the
user looks impatient because information is being presented too slowly, or
confused because it is going too fast -- facial expressions provide cues for
identifying and distinguishing between these different states. In recent years
much effort has been put into the area of recognizing facial expression, a
capability that is critical for a variety of human-machine interfaces, with the
hope of creating a person-independent expression recognition capability. While
there are indeed similarities in expressions across cultures and across people,
for anything but the most gross facial expressions analysis must be done
relative to the person's normal facial rest state -- something that definitely
isn't the same across people. Consequently, facial expression research has so
far been limited to recognition of a few discrete expressions rather than
addressing the entire spectrum of expression along with its subtle variations.
Before one can achieve a really useful expression analysis capability one must
be able to first recognize the person, and tune the parameters of the system to
that specific person.
Wearable Recognition Systems
When we build computers, cameras, microphones and other sensors into a
person's clothes, the computer's view moves from a passive third-person to an
active first-person vantage point . These wearable devices are able to adapt to
a specific user and to be more intimately and actively involved in the user's
activities. The field of wearable computing is rapidly expanding, and just
recently became a full-fledged Technical Committee within the IEEE Computer
Society. Consequently, we can expect to see rapidly-growing interest in the
largely-unexplored area of first-person image interpretation. Face recognition
is an integral part of wearable systems like memory aides, remembrance agents,
and context-aware systems. Thus there is a need for many future recognition
systems to be integrated with the user's clothing and accessories. For
instance, if you build a camera into your eyeglasses, then face recognition
software can help you remember the name of the person you are looking at by
whispering their name in your ear. Such devices are beginning to be tested by
the US Army for use by border guards in Bosnia, and by researchers at the
University of Rochester's Center for Future Health for use by Alzheimer's
patients.
Conclusion
Face recognition technology has come a long way in the last twenty years.
Today, machines are able to automatically verify identity information
for secure transactions, for surveillance and security tasks,
and for access control to buildings etc. These applications usually
work in controlled environments and recognition algorithms can
take advantage of the environmental constraints to obtain high
recognition accuracy. However, next generation face recognition
systems are going to have widespread application in smart environments
-- where computers and machines are more like helpful assistants.
To achieve this goal computers must be able to reliably identify
nearby people in a manner that fits naturally within the pattern
of normal human interactions. They must not require special interactions
and must conform to human intuitions about when recognition is
likely. This implies that future smart environments should use
the same modalities as humans, and have approximately the same
limitations. These goals now appear in reach -- however, substantial
research remains to be done in making person recognition technology
work reliably, in widely varying conditions using information
from single or multiple modalities.
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