Recognizing People by the Way They Walk

images (1)

Recognizing people by the way they walk can have numerous applications in the fields of security, leisure or medicine.

Ramon Mollineda, lecturer at the Department of Computing Languages and Systems at the Universitat Jaume I, is working with his team in the development of this new biometric technique that takes into account the way a person walks and his/her silhouette. The technique offers significant advantages as recognition can be done remotely and does not require the cooperation of the subject.

Detecting suspicious behaviour (video surveillance), access control to buildings or to restricted areas and demographic analysis of a population in terms of gender and age range are just some of the possible applications of this technology.

The role of biometrics as an artificial intelligence field is the identification of an individual based on certain physical and non-transferable aspects of his/her body, such as fingerprint or facial recognition. These are just two of the most widely used and developed biometric sources because, as the researcher states, “they are very reliable and difficult to fake, although both require that the user is close to the sensor and collaborates in the recognition process, and we can not always count on that.” Hence the importance of advancing in complementary techniques.

We all have a very personal way of walking. “Although it is easy to manipulate and consciously change, each person walks in a different way,” says Mollineda. “There are experiments in which a person has to recognize familiar people just watching his/her silhouette in motion and the success rate is very high,” he adds. It has to be kept in mind that there are several factors that influence so that each person has a unique way of walking. From a video of the subject walking, the developed system distinguishes the<em>background</em> silhouette and it becomes a sequence of silhouettes, placed one upon the other, resulting in a summary image. This final representation stores all physical appearance and movement of the person walking, thus getting a unique mark for each of them.

Read more . . .

See Also

 

 

The Latest Bing News on:
Recognizing People by the Way They Walk
The Latest Google Headlines on:
Recognizing People by the Way They Walk

[google_news title=”” keyword=”Recognizing People by the Way They Walk” num_posts=”10″ blurb_length=”0″ show_thumb=”left”]

The Latest Bing News on:
Biometric identification
The Latest Google Headlines on:
Biometric identification

[google_news title=”” keyword=”biometric identification” num_posts=”10″ blurb_length=”0″ show_thumb=”left”]

What's Your Reaction?
Don't Like it!
0
I Like it!
0
Scroll To Top