Two of the challenges in appearance-based gaze tracking are: 1) prediction accuracy, 2) the efficiency of calibration process, which can be considered as the collection and analysis phase of labelled and unlabelled eye data. In this paper, we introduce an appearance-based gaze tracking model with a rapid calibration. First we propose to concatenate local eye appearance Center-Symmetric Local Binary Pattern(CS-LBP) descriptor for each subregion of eye image to form an eye appearance feature vector. The spectral clustering is then introduced to get the supervision information of eye manifolds on-line. Finally, taking advantage of eye manifold structure, a sparse semisupervised Gaussian Process Regression(GPR) method is applied to estimate the subject's gaze coordinates. Experimental results demonstrate that our system with an efficient and accurate 5-points calibration not only can reduce the run-time cost but also can lead to a better accuracy result of 0.9°.
The identification of individuals by their finger dorsal patterns has become a very active area of research in recent years. In this paper, we present a multimodal biometric personal identification system that combines the information extracted from the finger dorsal surface image with the major and minor knuckle pattern regions. In particular, first the features are extracted from each single region by BSIF (binarized statistical image features) technique. Then, extracted information is fused at feature level. Fusion is followed by dimensionality reduction step using PCA (principal component analysis) + LDA (linear discriminant analysis) scheme in order to improve its discriminatory power. Finally, in the matching stage, the cosine Mahalanobis distance has been employed. Experiments were conducted on publicly available database for minor and major finger knuckle images, which was collected from 503 different subjects. Reported experimental results show that feature-level fusion leads to improved performance over single modality approaches, as well as over previously proposed methods in the literature.
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