Recent developments in video-based face recognition

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Abstract

Face recognition with its wide range of commercial and law enforcement applications has been one of themost active areas of research in the field of computer vision and pattern recognition. Personal identification systems based on faces have the advantage that facial images can be obtained from a distance without requiring cooperation of the subject, as compared to other biometrics such as fingerprint, iris, etc. Face recognition is concerned with identifying or verifying one or more persons from still images or video sequences using a stored database of faces. Depending on the particular application, there can be different scenarios, ranging from controlled still images to uncontrolled videos. Since face recognition is essentially the problem of recognizing a 3D object from its 2D image or a video sequence, it has to deal with significant appearance changes due to illumination and pose variations. Current algorithms perform well in controlled scenarios, but their performance is far from satisfactory in uncontrolled scenarios. Most of the current research in this area is focused toward recognizing faces in uncontrolled scenarios. This chapter presents an overview of recent video-based face recognitionmethods. In particular, recent sparse coding-based, manifold-based, probabilistic, geometric model-based, and dynamic model-based methods are reviewed.

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Zheng, J., Pate, V. M., & Chellappa, R. (2017). Recent developments in video-based face recognition. In Advances in Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (pp. 149–175). Springer London. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-50673-9_7

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