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16th International Conference on Pattern Recognition (ICPR'02) - Volume 3
Structure in Errors: A Case Study in Fingerprint Verification
Quebec City, QC, Canada
August 11-August 15
ISBN: 0-7695-1695-X
S. Pankanti, IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center
N. K. Ratha, IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center
R. M. Bolle, IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center
Measuring the accuracy of biometrics systems is important. Accuracy estimates depend very much on the quality of the test data that are used. Including poor quality data will degrade the accuracy estimates. What are the good quality data and what are the poor quality data is not revealed by simple accuracy estimates. We propose a novel methodology to analyze how the overall accuracy estimate of a system relates to the specific quality of biometrics samples. Using a large collection of fingerprint samples, we present an analysis of system accuracy, which suggests that a signifi cant part of the error is due to few fingers.
Citation:
S. Pankanti, N. K. Ratha, R. M. Bolle, "Structure in Errors: A Case Study in Fingerprint Verification," icpr, vol. 3, pp.30440, 16th International Conference on Pattern Recognition (ICPR'02) - Volume 3, 2002
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