Abstract

In this work, facial thermal infrared images are employed for intoxicated person discrimination. Specifically, the region of the forehead of the face of the sober and the corresponding intoxicated person is used to test if the employed Local Difference Patterns (LDPs) constitute discriminative features. For an intoxicated person, vessels on the forehead become more active so that the intensity of the pixels in this region is affected accordingly. The LDPs employed ignore orientation of the pixels distribution and give emphasis on the first and second norms of the differences as well as the ordered values of the pixels in the employed kernels. The statistics of the LDPs for the drunk person are different from those of the sober one and accordingly drunkenness can be ascertained by comparing the thermal infrared image of the corresponding sober and intoxicated person. Six from the eight LDPs examined to be used as features for drunk identification were proved successful. Their classification success rate was over 73 and up to 85%. The proposed method can be incorporated into a non-invasive inspection commercial system to be used by the police as a first step for intoxicated person detection. Forty one participants in the experiment have contributed to the creation of the unique sober–drunk database which is available on the web and contains over 4.000 images.

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