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About OMICS Group

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About OMICS Group OMICS Group International is an amalgamation of Open Access publications and worldwide international science conferences and events. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: About OMICS Group


1
About OMICS Group
  • OMICS Group International is an
    amalgamation of Open Access publications and
    worldwide international science conferences and
    events. Established in the year 2007 with the
    sole aim of making the information on Sciences
    and technology Open Access, OMICS Group
    publishes 400 online open access scholarly
    journals in all aspects of Science, Engineering,
    Management and Technology journals. OMICS Group
    has been instrumental in taking the knowledge on
    Science technology to the doorsteps of ordinary
    men and women. Research Scholars, Students,
    Libraries, Educational Institutions, Research
    centers and the industry are main stakeholders
    that benefitted greatly from this knowledge
    dissemination. OMICS Group also organizes
    300 International conferences annually across the
    globe, where knowledge transfer takes place
    through debates, round table discussions, poster
    presentations, workshops, symposia and
    exhibitions.

2
About OMICS Group Conferences
  • OMICS Group International is a pioneer and
    leading science event organizer, which publishes
    around 400 open access journals and conducts over
    300 Medical, Clinical, Engineering, Life
    Sciences, Pharma scientific conferences all over
    the globe annually with the support of more than
    1000 scientific associations and 30,000 editorial
    board members and 3.5 million followers to its
    credit.
  • OMICS Group has organized 500 conferences,
    workshops and national symposiums across the
    major cities including San Francisco, Las Vegas,
    San Antonio, Omaha, Orlando, Raleigh, Santa
    Clara, Chicago, Philadelphia, Baltimore, United
    Kingdom, Valencia, Dubai, Beijing, Hyderabad,
    Bengaluru and Mumbai.

3
Biometrics for Intelligence - Led Policing
  • Tom Baker
  • October 20, 2014
  • Biometrics Biostatistics Conference
  • Baltimore, Maryland

Baker Associates International Consultants
4
This Could Be A Gang Anywhere

5
Biometrics
  • From the Greek
  • Bio (life) metric or metry (to measure)

6
Chaotic Morphogenesis
  • From the Greek
  • Chaotic (disorder/confusion)
  • Morpho (form/shape)
  • Genesis (origin)

7
Verification or Identification
  • Verification (11) one-to-one
  • Identification (1N) one-to-many

8
Fingerprints the oldest biometric
  • 6000 BC by Assyrians, Babylonians, Japanese,
    Chinese
  • 1858 by English in India, Sir William Herschel
  • 1890s Alphonse Bertillon, Paris Police
    Bertillonage

9
Fingerprints the oldest biometric
  • 1890s Sir Francis Galtons details (minutia)
  • 1890s Sir Edward R Henry (classification)
  • 1904 Leavenworth and St. Louis PD, which leads
    to the foundation of the FBI files (1924), then
  • 1999 The FBIs IAFIS goes online

10
AFIS- Automated Fingerprint Identification System
  • IAFIS - FBIs Integrated Automated Fingerprint
    Identification System

11
Fingerprints Enrollment
  • Rolled Fingerprints Ten
  • rolled prints still are the
  • Gold Standard
  • Single-finger flats
  • used in verification (11)
  • Slaps Most often four
  • fingers together

12
Latents or Latent Prints
  • Also known as Markings or Tracings Valuable
    to Law enforcement,
  • only possible with fingerprints.

13
Palm Prints
  • Approached the same as fingerprints
  • 30 or more of latents at crime scenes are palms

14
Palm Prints
  • Already in NAFIS Australias national system
  • Part of IDENT1 in the UK
  • A key initiative in the FBIs NGI - Next
    Generation Identification

15
Recognition
  • From the Latin
  • again and to Know

16
Facial Recognition
  • Advantages
  • Disadvantages
  • Can be obtained covertly
  • Therefore potential for Law Enforcement
    identification (1N).
  • Only biometric suitable for surveillance
  • Not nearly as accurate as fingerprints - Yet.
  • Ideally, images need to be updated.
  • Sensitive to variations in pose angle,
    illumination, facial expression

17
Different methods used in Facial Recognition
  • Eigenfaces (spectral decomposition)
  • EBGM (Elastic Bunch
  • Graph Matching)
  • Support Vector Machines
  • (texture mapping)

18
Different methods used in Facial Recognition
  • LFA (Local Feature Analysis)- different areas of
    the face
  • Facial Thermography or thermal imaging
  • Ear Shape Shape of outer ear
  • Eigenhead Shape of head (often in 3D)

19
IRIS Recognition
  • Iris the colored ring surrounding the pupil
  • Like fingerprints, formed in the womb after
    conception- even twins have different iris
    characteristics

20
From "HYMN" by Francis Giacobetti From the left
of photo Francis Crick (Biophysician, UK),
Louise Bourgeois (Sculptor, USA), Garcia Marquez
(Novelist, Columbia),Ieoh Ming Pei (Architect,
USA), Woody Allen (Actor/Director, USA)
21
Verification or Identification
  • Verification (11) one-to-one
  • Identification (1N) one-to-many

22
IRIS Recognition
  • Works in identification (1N) as well as
    Verification (11)
  • However, not yet useful in surveillance

23
Retinal Scan
  • 1930s found that blood patterns in the back of
    the eye are unique to each individual
  • Small, internal to eye, thus difficult to image
  • Difficult to fool (spoof) or to replicate
  • Used in high end security situations (11)
  • Very difficult to use

24
Hand Geometry
  • Used for access control (11)
  • Hand Geometry only
  • Not palm or fingerprints
  • Limits hands are not highly distinctive

25
Other Biometrics
  • Skin Texture
  • Vein Patten
  • Finger Geometry
  • Ear shape
  • Speaker
  • Keystroke

26
Even More Remote
  • Body Odor
  • Body Salinity
  • Lips
  • Fingernails
  • Gait (Walk)

27
DNAdeoxyribonucleic acid
  • Not exactly a biometric Requires a sample
  • Not done in real time Not yet

28
DNAdeoxyribonucleic acid
  • Formed at conception Identical twins have the
    same
  • Very accurate, but requires an expert
  • NAFIS (Australian System) maintains DNA files
    along side fingerprint and palm files

29
Testing Organizations
  • NIST - National Institute of Standards and
    Technology Part of US Commerce Department has
    tested at FBI IAFIS
  • NBSP National Biometric Security Project
    independent non-profit an Underwriters
    Laboratory for biometrics
  • TNO TPD Part of the Netherlands Organization
    for Applied Scientific Research

30
Privacy Considerations
  • OECD Guidelines Protection of Privacy and
    Trans-border Flow of Personal Data Guidelines -
    issued on September 23, 1980
  • EU Data Protection Directive (95/46/EC) Passed
    by the Parliament and Council on October 24, 1998
    the Privacy Directive
  • U.K. Data Protection Act of 1998
  • USA The 4th, 5th, and 14th Amendments

31
Trends
  • Facial increased investigative use
  • Palms - increased investigative use and inclusion
    in national AFISs
  • Multi-modal two or more biometrics in same
    application - inclusion in national AFISs
  • Need for increased international cooperation and
    exchange (or cross searching)

32
(No Transcript)
33
Questions / Contact
  •   Tom Baker
  •   1-703-470-0090
  •   BakeAssociates_at_aol.com
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