“…It has been indicated by Guyton & Hall (Guyton & Hall, 1996) that the average diameter of blood vessels is around 10~15μm, which is too small to be detected by current IR cameras (limited by the spatial resolution); the skin directly above a blood vessel is on average 0.1°C warmer than the adjacent skin, which is beyond the thermal accuracy of current IR cameras. The methods using image segmentation in (Prokoski, 2001, Buddharaju et al, 2004, Buddharaju et al, 2005 are heuristic, and it still remains a big challenge to capture the pattern of blood vessels on each face. On the other hand, the phenomenon of " homoiotherm" due to human temperature regulation has led to the direct use of thermograms for recognition (Wilder et al, 1996, Socolinsky & Selinger, 2002, Wu et al, 2003, Chen et al, 2005.…”