Abstract

Doppelgängers (or lookalikes) usually yield an increased probability of false matches in a facial recognition system, as opposed to random face image pairs selected for non-mated comparison trials. In this work, the impact of doppelgängers on the HDA Doppelgänger and Disguised Faces in The Wild databases is assessed using a state-of-the-art face recognition system. It is found that doppelgänger image pairs yield very high similarity scores resulting in a significant increase of false match rates. Further, a doppelgänger detection method is proposed, which distinguishes doppelgängers from mated comparison trials by analysing differences in deep representations obtained from face image pairs. The proposed detection system employs a machine learning-based classifier, which is trained with generated doppelgänger image pairs utilising face morphing techniques. Experimental evaluations conducted on the HDA Doppelgänger and Look-Alike Face databases reveal a detection equal error rate of approximately 2.7% for the task of separating mated authentication attempts from doppelgängers.

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