DocumentCode :
3185154
Title :
Demographic effects on estimates of automatic face recognition performance
Author :
O´Toole, Alice J. ; Phillips, P. Jonathon ; An, Xiaobo ; Dunlop, Joseph
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Behavioral & Brain Sci., Univ. of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, TX, USA
fYear :
2011
fDate :
21-25 March 2011
Firstpage :
83
Lastpage :
90
Abstract :
The intended applications of automatic face recognition systems include venues that vary widely in demographic diversity. Formal evaluations of algorithms do not commonly consider the effects of population diversity on performance. We document the effects of racial and gender demographics on the accuracy of algorithms that match identity in pairs of face images. In particular, we focus on the effects of the “background” population distribution of non-matched identities against which identity matches are compared. The algorithm we tested was created by fusing three of the top performers from a recent US Government competition. First, we demonstrate the variability of algorithm performance estimates when the non-matched identities were demographically “yoked” by race and/or gender (i.e., “yoking” constrains non-matched pairs to be of the same race or gender). We also found a shift in the match threshold required to maintain a stable false positive rate when demographic control scenarios varied. These results were verified with two independent data sets that differed in demographic characteristics. In a second experiment, we explored the effects of progressive increases in population diversity on algorithm performance. We found systematic, but non-general, effects when the balance between majority and minority populations of non-matched identities shifted. Finally, we show that identity match accuracy differs substantially when the non-match identity population varied by race. The results indicate the importance of the demographic composition and modeling of the background population in predicting the accuracy of face recognition algorithms.
Keywords :
face recognition; gender issues; image matching; US government competition; automatic face recognition performance; background population; demographic diversity; gender demographics; image matching; population diversity; Accuracy; Databases; Delta modulation; Face; Face recognition; Lighting; Prediction algorithms;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Automatic Face & Gesture Recognition and Workshops (FG 2011), 2011 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Santa Barbara, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-9140-7
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/FG.2011.5771356
Filename :
5771356
Link To Document :
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