\section{Skeleton uniqueness} \label{sec:uniqueness} The most obvious concern raised by trying to use skeleton measurements as a recognizable biometric is their uniqueness. Are skeletons consistently and sufficiently distinct to use them for person recognition? \subsection{Face recognition benchmark} \label{sec:frb} A good way to understand the uniqueness of a metric is to look at how well an algorithm based on it performs in the \emph{pair-matching problem}. In this problem you are given two measurements of the metric and you want to decide whether they come from the same individual (matched pair) or from two different individuals (unmatched pair). This benchmark is standard for face recognition using the \emph{Labeled Faces in the Wild} \cite{lfw} database. Raw data of this benchmark is publicly available and has been derived as follows: the database is split into 10 subsets. From each of these subsets, 300 matched pairs and 300 unmatched pairs are randomly chosen. Each algorithm runs 10 separate leave-one-out cross-validation experiments on these sets of pairs. The average of the false-positive rates and the true-positive rates across the 10 experiments for a given threshold gives one operating point on the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve (Figure~\ref{fig:roc}). Note that in this benchmark the identity information of the individuals appearing in the pairs is not available, which means that the algorithms cannot form additional image pairs from the input data. This is referred to as the \emph{image-restricted} setting in the LFW benchmark. \subsection{Experiment design} In order to run an experiment similar to the one used in the face pair-matching problem (Section~\ref{sec:frb}), we use the Goldman Osteological Dataset \cite{deadbodies}. This dataset consists of skeletal measurements of 1538 skeletons uncovered around the world and dating throughout the last several thousand years. Given the way these data were collected, only a partial view of the skeleton is available, we keep six measurements: the lengths of four bones (radius, humerus, femur, and tibia) and the breadth and height of the pelvis. Because of missing values, this reduces the size of the dataset to 1191. From this dataset, 1191 matched pairs and 1191 unmatched pairs are generated. In practice, the exact measurements of the bones of living subjects are not directly accessible. Therefore, measurements are likely to have an error rate, whose variance depends on the method of collection (\eg measuring limbs over clothing versus on bare skin). Since each skeleton appears only once in the dataset, we simulate this error by adding independent random Gaussian noise to each measurement of the pairs. \subsection{Results} We evaluate the performance of the pair-matching problem on the dataset by using a proximity threshold algorithm: for a given threshold, a pair will be classified as \emph{matched} if the Euclidean distance between the two skeletons is lower than the threshold, and \emph{unmatched} otherwise. Formally, let $(\bs_1,\bs_2)$ be an input pair of the algorithm ($\bs_i\in\mathbf{R}_+^{6}$, are the six bone measurements), the output of the algorithm for the threshold $\delta$ is defined as: \begin{displaymath} A_\delta(\bs_1,\bs_2) = \begin{cases} 1 & \text{if $d(\bs_1,\bs_2) < \delta$}\\ 0 & \text{otherwise} \end{cases} \end{displaymath} \begin{figure}[t] \begin{center} \includegraphics[]{graphics/roc.pdf} \end{center} \vspace{-1.5\baselineskip} \caption{ROC curve for several standard deviations of the noise and for the state-of-the-art \emph{Associate-Predict} face detection algorithm. The standard deviation $\sigma$ is shown in millimeters} \label{fig:roc} \end{figure} Figure \ref{fig:roc} shows the ROC curve of the proximity threshold algorithm for different values of the standard deviation of the noise, as well as the ROC of the best performing face detection algorithm in the Image-restricted LFW benchmark: \emph{Associate-Predict} \cite{associate}. The results show that with a standard deviation of 3mm, skeleton proximity thresholding performs quite similarly to face detection at low false-positive rate. At this noise level, the error is smaller than 1cm with 99.9\% probability. Even with a standard deviation of 5mm, it is still possible to detect 90\% of the matched pairs with a false positive rate of 6\%. This experiment gives an idea of the noise variance level above which it is not possible to consistently distinguish skeletons. If the noise is small, a highly accurate classifier can be built by first learning a \emph{skeleton profile} for each individual from all the measurements in the training set. Then, given a new skeleton measurement, the algorithm classifies it to the individual whose skeleton profile is closest to the new measurement. In this case, there are two distinct sources of noise: \begin{itemize} \item the absolute deviation of the estimator: how far is the estimated profile from the exact skeleton profile of the person due to figure position or motion (\ie from walking). \item the noise of the new measurement: this comes from the device doing the measurement. \end{itemize} %%% Local Variables: %%% mode: latex %%% TeX-master: "kinect" %%% End: