Title :
Segmenting Non-Ideal Irises Using Geodesic Active Contours
Author :
Ross, Arun ; Shah, Samir
Author_Institution :
West Virginia Univ., Morgantown
fDate :
Sept. 19 2006-Aug. 21 2006
Abstract :
The richness and the apparent stability of the iris texture makes it a robust biometric trait for personal authentication. The performance of an automated iris recognition system is affected by the accuracy of the segmentation process used to isolate the iris structure from the other components in its vicinity, viz., the sclera, pupil, eyelids and eyelashes. Most segmentation models in the literature assume that the pupillary, the limbic and the eyelid boundaries are circular or elliptical in shape. Hence, they focus on determining model parameters that best fit these hypotheses. In this paper, we describe a novel iris segmentation scheme that employs Geodesic Active Contours to extract the iris from the surrounding structures. The proposed scheme elicits the iris texture in an iterative fashion depending upon both the local and global conditions in the image. The performance of an iris recognition system based on multiple Gabor filters is observed to improve upon application of the proposed segmentation algorithm. Experimental results on the WVU and CASIA v1.0 iris databases indicate the efficacy of the proposed technique.
Keywords :
active vision; biometrics (access control); differential geometry; feature extraction; image recognition; image segmentation; image texture; visual databases; CASIA v1.0; WVU; automated iris recognition system; geodesic active contours; iris databases; iris segmentation scheme; iris texture; nonideal irises; personal authentication; robust biometric trait; segmentation algorithm; segmentation process; Active contours; Authentication; Biometrics; Eyelashes; Eyelids; Image segmentation; Iris recognition; Robust stability; Shape; Waveguide discontinuities;
Conference_Titel :
Biometric Consortium Conference, 2006 Biometrics Symposium: Special Session on Research at the
Conference_Location :
Baltimore, MD
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-0487-2
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-0487-2
DOI :
10.1109/BCC.2006.4341625