Title :
Modeling Facial Soft Tissue Thickness for Automatic Skull-Face Overlay
Author :
Rosario Campomanes-Alvarez, B. ; Ibanez, Oscar ; Campomanes-Alvarez, Carmen ; Damas, Sergio ; Cordon, Oscar
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Fuzzy Evolutionary Applic., Eur. Centre for Soft Comput., Mieres, Spain
Abstract :
Craniofacial superimposition involves the process of overlaying a skull with a number of ante-mortem images of an individual and the analysis of their morphological correspondence. Within the craniofacial superimposition process, the skull-face overlay stage focuses on achieving the best possible overlay of the skull and a single ante-mortem image of a missing person. This technique has been commonly applied following a nonautomatic trial-and-error approach. Automatic skull-face overlay methods have been developed obtaining promising results. In this paper, we present two new variants that are an extension of existing 3-D-2-D methods to automatically superimpose a skull 3-D model on a facial photograph. We have modeled the imprecision related to the facial soft tissue depth between corresponding pairs of cranial and facial landmarks which typically guide the automatic approaches. As an illustration of the model´s performance, the soft tissue distances associated to studies for Mediterranean population have been considered for dealing with this landmark matching uncertainty. Hence, we directly incorporate the corresponding landmark spatial relationships within the automatic skull-face overlay procedure. We have tested the performance of our proposal on 18 skull-face overlay instances from a ground truth data set obtaining valuable results. The current proposal is thus the first automatic skull-face overlay method evaluated in a reliable and unbiased way.
Keywords :
biological tissues; face recognition; forensic science; 3D-2D methods; ante-mortem images; automatic skull-face overlay; cranial landmarks; craniofacial superimposition; facial landmarks; facial photograph; facial soft tissue thickness; missing person; morphological correspondence; nonautomatic trial-and-error approach; Biological tissues; Cranial; Proposals; Skull; Solid modeling; Three-dimensional displays; Uncertainty; 3D-2D skull-face overlay; Forensic anthropology; craniofacial identification; craniofacial superimposition; forensic anthropology; fuzzy sets and distances; soft tissues;
Journal_Title :
Information Forensics and Security, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TIFS.2015.2441000