# Alignment-Free Cross-Sensor Fingerprint Matching based on the   Co-Occurrence of Ridge Orientations and Gabor-HoG Descriptor

**Authors:** Helala AlShehri, Muhammad Hussain, Hatim AboAlSamh, Qazi Emad-ul-Haq,, and Aqil M. Azmi

arXiv: 1905.03699 · 2019-05-10

## TL;DR

This paper introduces an alignment-free, cross-sensor fingerprint matching method using ridge orientation co-occurrence and Gabor-HoG descriptors, improving interoperability across different fingerprint sensors.

## Contribution

It proposes a novel, robust fingerprint descriptor (Co-Ror) and an effective fusion with Gabor-HoG for cross-sensor matching, eliminating the need for registration.

## Key findings

- Outperforms state-of-the-art methods on benchmark datasets.
- Effective in cross-sensor fingerprint verification scenarios.
- Enhances interoperability between different fingerprint sensor types.

## Abstract

The existing automatic fingerprint verification methods are designed to work under the assumption that the same sensor is installed for enrollment and authentication (regular matching). There is a remarkable decrease in efficiency when one type of contact-based sensor is employed for enrolment and another type of contact-based sensor is used for authentication (cross-matching or fingerprint sensor interoperability problem,). The ridge orientation patterns in a fingerprint are invariant to sensor type. Based on this observation, we propose a robust fingerprint descriptor called the co-occurrence of ridge orientations (Co-Ror), which encodes the spatial distribution of ridge orientations. Employing this descriptor, we introduce an efficient automatic fingerprint verification method for cross-matching problem. Further, to enhance the robustness of the method, we incorporate scale based ridge orientation information through Gabor-HoG descriptor. The two descriptors are fused with canonical correlation analysis (CCA), and the matching score between two fingerprints is calculated using city-block distance. The proposed method is alignment-free and can handle the matching process without the need for a registration step. The intensive experiments on two benchmark databases (FingerPass and MOLF) show the effectiveness of the method and reveal its significant enhancement over the state-of-the-art methods such as VeriFinger (a commercial SDK), minutia cylinder-code (MCC), MCC with scale, and the thin-plate spline (TPS) model. The proposed research will help security agencies, service providers and law-enforcement departments to overcome the interoperability problem of contact sensors of different technology and interaction types.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.03699