Paper
17 April 2006 Acquiring a 2D rolled equivalent fingerprint image from a non-contact 3D finger scan
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Abstract
The use of fingerprints as a biometric is both the oldest mode of computer aided personal identification and the most relied-upon technology in use today. But current fingerprint scanning systems have some challenging and peculiar difficulties. Often skin conditions and imperfect acquisition circumstances cause the captured fingerprint image to be far from ideal. Also some of the acquisition techniques can be slow and cumbersome to use and may not provide the complete information required for reliable feature extraction and fingerprint matching. Most of the difficulties arise due to the contact of the fingerprint surface with the sensor platen. To attain a fast-capture, non-contact, fingerprint scanning technology, we are developing a scanning system that employs structured light illumination as a means for acquiring a 3-D scan of the finger with sufficiently high resolution to record ridge-level details. In this paper, we describe the postprocessing steps used for converting the acquired 3-D scan of the subject's finger into a 2-D rolled equivalent image.
© (2006) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Abhishika Fatehpuria, Daniel L. Lau, and Laurence G. Hassebrook "Acquiring a 2D rolled equivalent fingerprint image from a non-contact 3D finger scan", Proc. SPIE 6202, Biometric Technology for Human Identification III, 62020C (17 April 2006); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.666127
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CITATIONS
Cited by 21 scholarly publications and 4 patents.
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KEYWORDS
3D scanning

3D acquisition

3D image processing

Sensors

Feature extraction

Image quality

Image acquisition

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