Mary Theofanos, Ross Michaels, Shahram Orandi, Brian Stanton, Nien-Fan Zhang
Journal of Electronic Imaging, Vol. 17, Issue 01, 011007, (January 2008) https://doi.org/10.1117/1.2892681
TOPICS: Image quality, Scanners, Video, Sensors, Biometrics, Light emitting diodes, Image segmentation, Data modeling, Human-computer interaction, Standards development
Traditionally, the biometric field has viewed the subject as a passive source of the biometric sample rather than as an interactive
component of the biometric system. But fingerprint image quality is highly dependent on the human–computer interaction and usability considerations of the acquisition system. Those factors impacting
the acquisition of high-quality images must be identified, and
real-time feedback for subjects to ensure acceptable quality images
must be integrated into fingerprint capture systems. We report on a
usability study that examined the influence of instructional materials on the user (subject) performance of a 10-print slap acquisition process. In addition, we also investigated the relationship of pressure and image quality as a mechanism to provide real-time feedback to the subject. The usability study included 300 participants who received instructions and interacted with the scanner. How information is provided to the subject on interacting with the fingerprint device does indeed affect image quality. The pressure findings are less conclusive; there was no clear relationship between image quality and pressure that could be exploited for feedback to the subject. However, a minimum pressure was required to initiate our capture process.