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I am developing a facelogin application. I could able to identify who the person with 80% accuracy. I need to differentiate between

  1. A person standing infront of camera and
  2. A poster of the same person kept infront of the camera.

Is this possible?

I did the login using opencv

Help is welcomed from any programming language.
Thanks

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  • I very much doubt it is possible, but I'd be interested in any answers Apr 5, 2011 at 10:04
  • Well, I guess you could somehow flash the user(change the amount of light emitted towards users eyes) and check for users pupils reaction. :)
    – mkvcvc
    Apr 5, 2011 at 10:07
  • Require the user to stay still, analyse their face for authorization, then require them to turn their head left and then right and take seperate analysis of each side of their head. Since they can't do this with a flat poster it should stop any falsification. In the event that they have access to a picture of all 3 sides of a person (front, left, right), just detect if the picture changed much between each view (i.e. did they drop the poster and put up another one? If so, decline their login)
    – Tom Glenn
    Apr 5, 2011 at 10:10
  • as m.edmondson said its very much impossible right now, as the camera has no depth (e.g. its a 2D representation of a 3D world). You can try and use 2 or more cameras, like they do in 3D movie making, but the technology is not there to help you...
    – Sigtran
    Apr 5, 2011 at 10:10
  • @Tom Glenn what would stop them from showing 3 different pictures?
    – Sigtran
    Apr 5, 2011 at 10:11

2 Answers 2

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Take multiple snapshots in short succession. The facial expression on a photo does not change, the face on a photo does not blink with the eyelids and extrapolating the relative depth of the facial elements by means of tiny changes in angle between the snapshots yields a distinct result for photos.

If you can use 2 cameras, calculate the transformation between shots taken by both cameras at the same time. This transformation should be different for plane surfaces and faces (even though you might not be able to extrapolate the actual threedimensional structure).

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  • That's prejudicial to people in comas & the 'life challenged', expect to hear from the lawyers of the first, and the mediums of the second. ;) Apr 5, 2011 at 11:20
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Any such method can be fooled by several videorecords, showing the same person in different positions. For example, you may ask a person to turn around, and this can be recorded and submitted to your program. In the same way, you may decide to, for example, highlight person's face with external light sources, but this also can be recorded and reproduced.

My advice is - do several auth movement series (e.g. nod, head-bobbing, closing eyes, etc) - more is better, then ask user to execute one or more of them in some random order pretty fast. You also may log and count insuccessful auth attempts. Then you will be notified, when someone missordered records for a few times.

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  • This could still be fooled with pre-recorded footage of the user and some clever software to detect what the page is asking the user to do (A simple screen scraper?) and automatically play the correct video footage. The fact is, it is impossible to completely secure a system that relies on a simple webcam and some 2D image processing.
    – Tom Glenn
    Apr 5, 2011 at 11:48

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