Abstract

The finger vein trait has attracted widespread attention for personal authentication in recent years. However, most finger vein verification methods are performed on the single perspective, captured by a monocular near-infrared camera fixed at one side of the finger. Consequently, the contents of a single perspective have few details of the spatial network structure of the finger vein and show noticeable differences even if the posture of the same finger is slightly different. Both of them impact the verification performance. Hence, finger vein images captured from different viewpoints are considered in this work. We first design a low-cost multi-perspective based dorsal finger vein imaging device for data collection. A deep neural network named Hierarchical Content-Aware Network (HCAN) is then proposed to extract the discriminative hierarchical features of the finger vein. Specifically, HCAN is compound of a Global Stem Network (GSN) and a Local Perception Module (LPM). GSN aims to extract the latent global 3D feature from all perspectives through a recurrent neural network. It enables the model to retain the details in previous hidden states by incorporating a memory weighting strategy. LPM is designed to perceive each perspective from the aspect of image entropy. Guided by the entropy loss, LPM captures the prominent local feature and improves the discriminability and robustness of the hierarchical feature. The experimental results on the newly collected THU-MFV database demonstrate the superiority of the proposed method in comparison with other multi-perspective and single-perspective based methods.

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