Biometric Security

Nature of Innovation

Biometric security market calls for new generation solutions that would provide better recognition accuracy, convenience-in-use and spoof-protection. Artec Group introduces a novel D3D human recognition technology that addresses these market needs. Powered by D3D Broadway Cameras™, the Technology allows capturing both shape and texture of the object surface in a real time video mode and enables surveillance of large areas including passageways, front-desks and others.

Multi-biometric recognition

The Technology effects simultaneous analysis of several biometrics to perform hi-precision human recognition. All the biometric identifiers are extracted from the 2D+3D video and include physiological and behavioral traits such as height, gestures, gait, shape, hand geometry and others. Through this biometric fusion, the Technology gains better accuracy of recognition, convenience-in-use and stability to unfavorable factors than each of the biometrics could achieve alone. The fusion also increases protection against spoof and fraud attacks by a complex user verification.

 

 

Non-cooperative scenarios

The non-cooperative security solutions should not bring people to change their habitual behavior to start using the system. With the Technology, an individual is free from necessity to stop and interact with the recognizing device. No positioning or touching is required. User comfort is ensured by two Broadway cameras that observe a monitored area in a wide field of view covering the whole human height range as well as detecting up to three people abreast. The Technology may also be used in a hidden mode for authenticating individuals without their awareness.

On-the-fly operation

Success of any product or solution depends on its acceptance by users. The more the system is convenient and user-friendly, the more efficient it will be. For those reasons, the Technology is able to identify walking or even running people. While the person passes through the monitored area, the system completes the recognition cycle. Such hi-speed performance guarantees considerable throughput capacity of the system, which may amount up to thousands persons an hour.