Power-Law Radon-Transformed Superimposed Inverse Filter Synthetic Discriminant Correlator for Facial Recognition

Abstract

A power-law correlation based on an inverse filter Fourier-Radon-transform synthetic discriminant function (SDF) for facial recognition is proposed. In order to avoid spectral overlap and nonlinear crosstalk, superposition of rotationally variant sets of inverse filter Fourier-transformed Radon-processed templates is used to generate the SDF. For the inverse filter, the Fourier transform of M projections (Radon Transform) from one training image is combined with (N-1) M Fourier transform of M projections taken from another N-1 training image. This synthetic SDF filter has a very high discrimination capability; however, it is not noise robust. To overcome this problem, a power-law dynamic range compression is added to the correlation process. The proposed filter has three advantages: (1) high discrimination capability as an inverse filter, (2) noise robustness due to dynamic range compression, and (3) crosstalk-free nonlinear processing. The filter performance was evaluated by established metrics, such as peak-to-correlation energy (PCE), Horner efficiency, and correlation-peak intensity. The results showed significant improvement as the power-law filter compression increased.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Mar 01, 2008
Accession Number
ADA482314

Entities

People

  • Bahareh Haji-saeed
  • Charles L. Woods
  • Jed Khoury
  • John Kierstead

Organizations

  • Air Force Research Laboratory

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Biomedical
  • Cyber
  • Energy and Power Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Air Force Research Laboratories
  • Composite Images
  • Compression
  • Computer Programs
  • Computer Simulations
  • Correlators
  • Discrimination
  • Dynamic Range
  • Efficiency
  • Facial Recognition
  • Intensity
  • Matched Filters
  • Pattern Recognition
  • Recognition
  • Template Patterns
  • Training
  • Two Dimensional

Fields of Study

  • Engineering

Readers

  • Computer Vision.
  • Image Processing and Computer Vision.