• DocumentCode
    699669
  • Title

    On gait as a biometric: Progress and prospects

  • Author

    Nixon, Mark S. ; Carter, John N.

  • Author_Institution
    Sch. of Electron. & Comput. Sci., Univ. of Southampton, Southampton, UK
  • fYear
    2004
  • fDate
    6-10 Sept. 2004
  • Firstpage
    1401
  • Lastpage
    1404
  • Abstract
    There is increasing interest in automatic recognition by gait given its unique capability to recognize people at a distance when other biometrics are obscured. Application domains are those of any noninvasive biometric, but with particular advantage in surveillance scenarios. Its recognition capability is supported by studies in other domains such as medicine (biomechanics), mathematics and psychology which also suggest that gait is unique. Further, examples of recognition by gait can be found in literature, with early reference by Shakespeare concerning recognition by the way people walk. Many of the current approaches confirm the early results that suggested gait could be used for identification, and now on much larger databases. This has been especially influenced by DARPA´s Human ID at a Distance research program with its wide scenario of data and approaches. Gait has benefited from the developments in other biometrics and has led to new insight particularly in view of covariates. Equally, gait-recognition approaches concern extraction and description of moving articulated shapes and this has wider implications than just in biometrics.
  • Keywords
    feature extraction; gait analysis; object recognition; video surveillance; DARPA human ID; automatic gait recognition; biomechanics; mathematics; medicine; moving articulated shape description; moving articulated shape extraction; noninvasive biometric; people recognition; psychology; recognition capability; surveillance scenarios; Abstracts; Adaptive optics; Biomedical optical imaging; Footwear; Laboratories; Optical imaging;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Signal Processing Conference, 2004 12th European
  • Conference_Location
    Vienna
  • Print_ISBN
    978-320-0001-65-7
  • Type

    conf

  • Filename
    7080199