Nine Years of Pediatric Iris Recognition: Evidence for Biometric Permanence
Naveenkumar G Venkataswamy, Masudul H Imtiaz, Stephanie Schuckers

TL;DR
This longitudinal study demonstrates that pediatric iris recognition remains reliable over nine years, with performance approaching adult levels, provided high-quality imaging and proper enrollment policies are maintained.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive nine-year evaluation of pediatric iris recognition, revealing temporal behaviors and confirming biometric permanence in children.
Findings
False non-match rates stayed below 0.5% over nine years.
Developmental confounding affects VeriEye's performance, not true template aging.
Image quality and pupil dilation are key factors influencing longitudinal performance.
Abstract
Biometric permanence in pediatric populations remains poorly understood despite widespread deployment of iris recognition for children in national identity programs such as India's Aadhaar and trusted traveler programs like Canada's NEXUS. This study presents a comprehensive longitudinal evaluation of pediatric iris recognition, analyzing 276 subjects enrolled between ages 4-12 and followed up to nine years through adolescence. Using 18,318 near-infrared iris images acquired semi-annually, we evaluated commercial (VeriEye) and open-source (OpenIris) systems through linear mixed-effects models that disentangle enrollment age, developmental maturation, and elapsed time while controlling for image quality and physiological factors. False non-match rates remained below 0.5% across the nine-year period for both matchers using pediatric-calibrated thresholds, approaching adult-level…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBiometric Identification and Security · Face Recognition and Perception · Ocular Disorders and Treatments
