Abstract

Biometrics technology is keep growing substantially in the last decades with great advances in biometric applications. An accurate personal authentication or identification has become a critical step in a wide range of applications such as national ID, electronic commerce, and automated and remote banking. The recent developments in the biometrics area have led to smaller, faster, and cheaper systems such as mobile device systems. As a kind of human biometrics for personal identification, fingerprint is the dominant trait due to its simplicity to be captured, processed, and extracted without violating user privacy. In a wide range of applications of fingerprint recognition, including civilian and forensics implementations, a large amount of fingerprints are collected and stored everyday for different purposes. In Automatic Fingerprint Identification System (AFIS) with a large database, the input image is matched with all fields inside the database to identify the most potential identity. Although satisfactory performances have been reported for fingerprint authentication (1:1 matching), both time efficiency and matching accuracy deteriorate seriously by simple extension of a 1:1 authentication procedure to a 1:N identification system (Manhua, 2010). The system response time is the key issue of any AFIS, and it is often improved by controlling the accuracy of the identification to satisfy the system requirement. In addition to developing new technologies, it is necessary to make clear the trade-off between the response time and the accuracy in fingerprint identification systems. Moreover, from the versatility and developing cost points of view, the trade-off should be realized in terms of system design, implementation, and usability. Fingerprint classification is one of the standard approaches to speed up the matching process between the input sample and the collected database (K. Jain et al., 2007). Fingerprint classification is considered as indispensable step toward reducing the search time through large fingerprint databases. It refers to the problem of assigning fingerprint to one of several pre-specified classes, and it presents an interesting problem in pattern recognition, especially in the real and time sensitive applications that require small response time. Fingerprint classification process works on narrowing down the search domain into smaller database subsets, and hence speeds up the total response time of any AFIS. Even for

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