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  4. Development of a systematic computer vision-based method to analyse and compare images of false identity documents for forensic intelligence purposes-Part I: Acquisition, calibration and validation issues
 
research article

Development of a systematic computer vision-based method to analyse and compare images of false identity documents for forensic intelligence purposes-Part I: Acquisition, calibration and validation issues

Auberson, Marie
•
Baechler, Simon
•
Zasso, Michael  
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2016
Forensic Science International

Following their detection and seizure by police and border guard authorities, false identity and travel documents are usually scanned, producing digital images. This research investigates the potential of these images to classify false identity documents, highlight links between documents produced by a same modus operandi or same source, and thus support forensic intelligence efforts. Inspired by previous research work about digital images of Ecstasy tablets, a systematic and complete method has been developed to acquire, collect, process and compare images of false identity documents. This first part of the article highlights the critical steps of the method and the development of a prototype that processes regions of interest extracted from images. Acquisition conditions have been fine-tuned in order to optimise reproducibility and comparability of images. Different filters and comparison metrics have been evaluated and the performance of the method has been assessed using two calibration and validation sets of documents, made up of 101 Italian driving licenses and 96 Portuguese passports seized in Switzerland, among which some were known to come from common sources. Results indicate that the use of Hue and Edge filters or their combination to extract profiles from images, and then the comparison of profiles with a Canberra distance-based metric provides the most accurate classification of documents. The method appears also to be quick, efficient and inexpensive. It can be easily operated from remote locations and shared amongst different organisations, which makes it very convenient for future operational applications. The method could serve as a first fast triage method that may help target more resource-intensive profiling methods (based on a visual, physical or chemical examination of documents for instance). Its contribution to forensic intelligence and its application to several sets of false identity documents seized by police and border guards will be developed in a forthcoming article (part II). (C) 2016 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.forsciint.2016.01.016
Web of Science ID

WOS:000370179900014

Author(s)
Auberson, Marie
Baechler, Simon
Zasso, Michael  
Genessay, Thibault
Patiny, Luc  
Esseiva, Pierre
Date Issued

2016

Publisher

Elsevier Ireland Ltd

Published in
Forensic Science International
Volume

260

Start page

74

End page

84

Subjects

Image analysis and comparison

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Histograms

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Profiling

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Profiles

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Filters

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Scanner

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Counterfeit

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Forgery

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
ISIC-GE  
Available on Infoscience
April 1, 2016
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/125304
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