In a statement, Aurora says the test validated its technology, which “has come out ahead in the rank 50 search results against a gallery of 10,660 people.”
Facial biometrics technology developer Aurora has received independent verification that its technology is at the leading edge, the company says.
The company’s Deep Learning facial recognition system relies on infrared technology, and as such it’s excluded from the Nationalist Institute of Standards and Technology’s (NIST) Face Recognition Challenges and Evaluations (FaCET) test. But a team of researchers from the University of Nottingham Computer Vision Lab recently set up a test adhering to similar parameters. In a statement, Aurora says the test validated its technology, which “has come out ahead in the rank 50 search results against a gallery of 10,660 people.” (Full results are available through the lead researcher’s website.)
There is good reason to expect more news from Aurora given its high profile and the growing popularity of biometrics technologies that leverage infrared light. Infrared facial recognition has been getting a bigger profile lately through the Windows Hello biometric authentication platform built into Windows 10, and as excitement about its sophisticated imaging capabilities grows, Aurora’s profile may grow along with it.
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November 4, 2015 – by Alex Perala
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