Biometric systems are increasingly replacing traditional password-and token-based authentication systems. Security and recognition accuracy are the two most important aspects to consider in designing a biometric system. In this paper, a comprehensive review is presented to shed light on the latest developments in the study of fingerprint-based biometrics covering these two aspects with a view to improving system security and recognition accuracy. Based on a thorough analysis and discussion, limitations of existing research work are outlined and suggestions for future work are provided. It is shown in the paper that researchers continue to face challenges in tackling the two most critical attacks to biometric systems, namely, attacks to the user interface and template databases. How to design proper countermeasures to thwart these attacks, thereby providing strong security and yet at the same time maintaining high recognition accuracy, is a hot research topic currently, as well as in the foreseeable future. Moreover, recognition accuracy under non-ideal conditions is more likely to be unsatisfactory and thus needs particular attention in biometric system design. Related challenges and current research trends are also outlined in this paper. recognition as an example. In the stage of enrollment, a user presents their finger to the fingerprint sensor and a fingerprint image is acquired by the sensor module. Certain features of the acquired fingerprint image are extracted, and further adapted or transformed to generate template data for the purpose of comparison in the verification stage. In the verification stage, the fingerprint image of a query is collected by the sensor module. The feature representations of the query fingerprint image go through the same process as in the enrollment stage, so as to obtain query data. The query data are then compared with the template data so that a matching outcome is attained.
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