How Eye Blink Affects the Recognition Performance of Traditional Off-Angle Iris Images

Iris recognition is known to be a robust biometric method, leveraging distinctive iris patterns for reliable identification. However, challenges arise in traditional approaches, especially in non-ideal images captured in environments where subjects can freely move around. This research focuses on th...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inProceedings of IEEE Southeastcon pp. 1243 - 1249
Main Authors Headley, Eli, Tebor, Daniel, Karakaya, Mahmut
Format Conference Proceeding
LanguageEnglish
Published IEEE 15.03.2024
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Summary:Iris recognition is known to be a robust biometric method, leveraging distinctive iris patterns for reliable identification. However, challenges arise in traditional approaches, especially in non-ideal images captured in environments where subjects can freely move around. This research focuses on the impact of eyelid occlusion on off-angle iris recognition within a traditional framework. The primary objectives are to i) assess the impact of eye blink on overall recognition performance; ii) explore the effects on each specific angle; and iii) examine the occlusion level required to maintain an acceptable recognition performance in a traditional iris recognition pipeline. To generate different levels of eyelid occlusion, we manipulated the eyelid segmentation results to mimic eye blinking due to lack of adequate amount of eye blinking images in publicly available datasets. We conducted three sets of experiments using frontal and off-angle iris images from 100 different subjects. Based on the results, up to a certain occlusion level (60%), eyelid occlusion enhances performance for severe off-angle images by masking distortion-prone iris portions. This improvement comes from the masking of non-ideal portions of the off-angle iris images that are distorted by the refraction of light through the cornea caused by the gaze angle. This insight offers potential improvements for traditional iris recognition, highlighting the nuanced interplay of occlusion and gaze angle on recognition performance.
ISSN:1558-058X
DOI:10.1109/SoutheastCon52093.2024.10500074