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Fig. 2 – Test results Personal Memory Assistant Facial Recognition System The facial identification system is divided into the following two components:

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Presentation on theme: "Fig. 2 – Test results Personal Memory Assistant Facial Recognition System The facial identification system is divided into the following two components:"— Presentation transcript:

1 Fig. 2 – Test results Personal Memory Assistant Facial Recognition System The facial identification system is divided into the following two components: Detection This isolates the face using a trained cascade of boosted classifiers based on spatial contrasts. Once isolated, the face is aligned, normalized for lighting and masked to obscure the background. Fig. 1. is an image of this process. Recognition Covariance matrices are calculated from the difference between the captured face and the mean of a set of one subject’s stored faces. The eigenface algorithm uses Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA) to compare the collected faces with those already stored for each subject. Speaker Identification System The speech wave goes through the following three major processing steps: Preprocessing This is normalization of the sample to an amplitude range of {-1,1} Feature Extraction Spectral values are saved from a Fast Fourier Transform of the signal. The cluster of these values for all samples of an ID is called the voiceprint. Pattern Matching A Nearest Neighbor Algorithm with Euclidean distances is used to compare each new sample to all existing voiceprints. The PMA system then decides if this sample should be saved as the voiceprint of a new subject, or added to an existing subject’s voiceprint. Camera Speaker Identification Facial Recognition Audio Database Image Database Profile Database Compare Entry Form Display Update True False Mic Delete Search Overall Flow Chart Fig. 1 – Face Detection Abstract Facial recognition and speaker verification systems have been widely used in the security field. In this area the systems have to be very accurate to prevent unauthorized users from accessing classified information. The extensive list of possible uses of these systems in the commercial world has not been taken advantage of yet. It is often difficult to remember the name of a person who is encountered out of context or infrequently. This situation can prove to be very embarrassing for the forgetful person. It can also be insulting to the person who is not remembered. The Personal Memory Assistant uses facial recognition and speaker verification to help avoid this situation. A user discretely collects images and voice samples of the person to be identified. The facial recognition component analyzes the image to identify the three closest facial matches in the system. The speaker identification component does the same to identify the top two voice matches. The guesses are compared using an algorithm that was developed through testing. If the guesses match, a picture of the person and personal profile is displayed to the user. If no match is made, the user has the option to add the subject to the database. In addition to the identification process, the system also gives the option of searching for and updating entries in the database. Group 7 Authors Scott Kyle CTE ’08 Erika Sanchez EE ’08 Meredith Skolnick CTE ’08 Advisor Dr. Kenneth Laker University of Pennsylvania Dept. of Electrical and Systems Engineering System Performance 83.0% Correct Identification 4.3% Incorrect Identification 12.7% “No Match” when in system System Testing Overall Testing -A subject pool was gathered with demographics like the US population -Each subject was added to the database, and then tested 3 times -All identification results were stored to be analyzed later. WAV number testing -The same testing sample was used to test the Speaker Identification accuracy with an incrementing number of samples in the database. -The results are shown in Fig. 2. Weights range from 0-1.0. -Vertical lines indicate thresholds for manipulating speaker or voice weights. Comparison formula


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