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New York Times
Face-recognition technology, often touted as a
promising tool in the fight against terrorism, earned a
bad reputation after it failed miserably in some
well-publicized tests for picking faces out of crowds.
Yet, on simpler challenges, the technology's performance
is improving and business has been growing.
Major casinos now use the technology to spot card
counters at blackjack tables. Washington is planning to
require the technology in the next generation of
American passports. Several states are using
face-recognition systems to check for individuals who
have obtained multiple driver's licenses by lying about
their identity. And Pinellas County, Fla., recently
began deploying the system in police cars so officers
can check the people they stop against a database of
photographs without having to go back to the office.
Face-recognition systems, using cameras and computers
to map someone's facial features, collect the data for
storage in databases or on a microchip on documents like
passports. Making the technology work has required
nearly perfect lighting and cooperative subjects,
conditions that are not present when trying to spot
suspected terrorists and criminals in a crowd.
That kind of application, however, remains a goal.
This summer, the National Institute of Standards and
Technology will stage a competition, challenging vendors
to cut error rates on systems it tested in 2002 by at
least 90 percent, with the results to be published next
year. The prize for top performers - bragging rights
based on impartial tests - is a valuable marketing tool
in an industry filled with small companies.
For now, sellers of the technology have to deal with
much skepticism. "The companies have not done a
good job of positioning it, and as a result the
technology has gotten a black eye," said Thomas J.
Colatosti, a security consultant who was formerly the
chief executive of Viisage, one of the few publicly
traded companies in the business.
The most damaging publicity came from tests of
face-recognition software and video-surveillance cameras
used to spot criminal suspects on the streets of Tampa,
Fla., and Virginia Beach. Those programs have not led to
a single arrest, but have angered privacy advocates.
Another face-recognition system that scanned 100,000
football fans entering the 2001 Super Bowl in Tampa
picked out 19 people with criminal records, but none
were among those being sought by the authorities.
Nonetheless, major integrators of security technology
for governments, like the Unisys
Corporation, Honeywell
International and I.B.M.,
all support face-recognition technology for some uses.
Viisage, based in Billerica, Mass., has seen its stock
price double this year, and shares of its major domestic
rival, Identix,
based in Minnetonka, Minn., have also risen sharply.
Viisage closed Friday at $9.81 a share, down 26 cents,
or 2.6 percent, on the Nasdaq.
Though the sector remains volatile, some of the
strength of those two stocks reflects the success of the
companies in diversifying away from dependence on face
recognition, said Joel P. Fishbein Jr., who follows
security technology for Janney Montgomery Scott, a
brokerage firm in Philadelphia that makes a market in
the stocks but does not own any of them. Mr. Fishbein
added that there is a high percentage of short sellers
in the market, who are betting the prices will tumble.
Skepticism has also made it hard for entrepreneurs
attempting to break into the field with new innovations.
"It soured the whole market," said Lawrence
Schrank, co-founder and chairman of 3DBiometrics, a
recent start-up in Boulder, Colo., that is pursuing the
use of lasers to map facial structures. Dr. Schrank, a
former researcher at Xerox
Parc, said that the technology, currently used in
medical-imaging equipment, could help the military
identify individuals at long distances.
Since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, there
have been numerous trials of identity-verification
technologies at airports. Some trials involved matching
volunteers posing as terrorist suspects to file photos
of them on a watch list. Others tried to match
authorized personnel like flight crews with photo
databases.
The biggest problems were the large number of
"suspects" and unauthorized people who passed
through control points undetected. Critics, like the
American Civil Liberties Union, have also complained
that the systems routinely generate a smaller number of
"false positives," which mistakenly identify
innocent people as suspects.
Analysts and many industry officials say that too
much is being expected from the technology, which is
still one of the newest methods in biometrics, a field
that includes analysis of fingerprints, voices, hand
shapes, gait and patterns of the iris.
The total biometrics market this year will reach
about $1.2 billion, with face-recognition systems
accounting for $144 million, according to projections by
the International Biometric Group, a research company in
New York. Face-recognition revenues should double next
year and climb to more than $800 million by 2008,
according to International Biometric.
Advocates of face-recognition technology have long
promoted it as one of the least intrusive biometrics,
and potentially the most powerful because it can make
use of a huge amount of existing data.
"There are 1.2 billion digitized photos of
people in databases around the world," the chief
executive of Identix, Joseph J. Atick, said.
In the late 1990's, entrepreneurs in the field raced
to come up with the best mathematical formula for
accurately describing a face and the software for
quickly measuring it against databases. Pioneers like
Dr. Atick played down the difficulty of getting useful
images, contending the systems measured so many
variables that they would be hard to deceive.
Experience showed otherwise. Performance plummeted in
poor lighting, when subjects moved past control points
without staring directly into the cameras and when
eyeglasses or other objects covered part of the face.
Success rates also declined as the databases of
potential matches grew and as the photos used got older.
Government-sponsored testing revealed other
unexplained anomalies, like the tendency of the systems
to identify men more accurately than women, and Asians
more accurately than other races.
Technology sellers are pursing a variety of
strategies to improve the results. Some are developing
systems that start with three-dimensional images taken
by multiple cameras, allowing more varied head angles as
a person walks through a checkpoint. Others are
developing complex mathematical functions to transform
two-dimensional images into three-dimensional models.
They are also using software to compensate for poor
lighting and to take shadows off a face.
The technical advances are having an impact. Viisage,
for example, struggled to achieve a 50 percent
recognition rate in tests last year at Boston's Logan
International Airport. But Mohamed Lazzouni, the
company's chief technology officer, claimed that
Viisage's results would improve to better than 90
percent if it repeated the trial with its latest
technology, including elements brought in when it
acquired ZN Vision Technologies of Germany in January.
Combining face recognition with other biometrics or
even nonbiometric security measures could also improve
the success rate. Identix hopes to meet the goal set by
the National Institute of Standards and Technology by
combining a technology for measuring skin texture with
its FaceIt feature mapping system, Dr. Atick said.
Last year, the International Civil Aviation
Organization, a division of the United Nations, adopted
the use of dual biometrics in passport standards. That
agency's decision to have face-recognition technology
and fingerprints incorporated in all passports has been
endorsed by the United States, which recently began
laying the groundwork for adding face recognition to
fingerprinting in all visa applications.
Those documents will eventually contain microchips
recording lasting facial characteristics like the
distance between eyes and shape of the jaw. Scanners at
check-in counters could then check whether the face of
the traveler bearing the document matches the data on
the chip.
But the challenge of including the technology in
passports is still enormous. The Bush administration
told Congress that neither the United States nor any
other country could comply with the Oct. 26 deadline
Congress had set for all travelers who do not require a
visa to enter the United States to have the new
biometrically equipped passports.
Most experts say including face data on microchips in
passports will take at least another year, and deploying
the systems needed to analyze the data at every port of
entry could be delayed for years.
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