Post-mortem Human Iris Recognition
Mateusz Trokielewicz, Adam Czajka, Piotr Maciejewicz

TL;DR
This study investigates post-mortem iris recognition, revealing that irises remain identifiable for several hours after death, challenging prior assumptions about their immediate uselessness for biometric identification.
Contribution
First experimental analysis of post-mortem iris recognition demonstrating its viability hours after death and detailing the deterioration timeline.
Findings
Over 90% recognition success a few hours after death
Recognition rate drops significantly after approximately 22 hours
Only two enrollment failures out of 104 images across four methods
Abstract
This paper presents a unique analysis of post-mortem human iris recognition. Post-mortem human iris images were collected at the university mortuary in three sessions separated by approximately 11 hours, with the first session organized from 5 to 7 hours after demise. Analysis performed for four independent iris recognition methods shows that the common claim of the iris being useless for biometric identification soon after death is not entirely true. Since the pupil has a constant and neutral dilation after death (the so called "cadaveric position"), this makes the iris pattern perfectly visible from the standpoint of dilation. We found that more than 90% of irises are still correctly recognized when captured a few hours after death, and that serious iris deterioration begins approximately 22 hours later, since the recognition rate drops to a range of 13.3-73.3% (depending on the…
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