Hosseyndoust Foomany, Farbod (2010) Analysis of Voiceprint and Other Biometrics for Criminological and Security Applications. Doctoral thesis, University of Huddersfield.
Abstract

This Thesis examines the role and limitations of voice biometrics in the contexts of security and
for crime reduction. The main thrust of the Thesis is that despite the technical and non-technical hurdles that this research has identified and sought to overcome, voice can be an effective and sustainable biometric if used in the manner proposed here. It is contended that focused and continuous evaluation of the strength of systems within a solid framework is essential to the development and application of voice biometrics and that special attention needs to be paid to human dimensions in system design and prior to deployment.

Through an interdisciplinary approach towards the theme reflected in the title several scenarios
are presented of the use of voice in security / crime reduction, crime investigation, forensics and surveillance contexts together with issues surrounding their development and implementation.
With a greater emphasis on security-oriented voice verification (due to the diversity of the usage scenarios and prospect of use) a new framework is presented for analysis of the reliability and security of voice verification.

This research calls not only for a standard evaluation scheme and analytical framework but also takes active steps to evaluate the prototype system within the framework under various conditions. Spoof attacks, noises, coding, distance and channel effects are among the factors that are studied. Moreover, an additional under-researched area, the detection of counterfeit signals, is also explored.

While numerous technical and design contributions made in this project are summarised in chapter 2, the research mainly aims to provide solid answers to the high-level strategic questions. The Thesis culminates in a synthesis chapter in which realistic expectations, design requirements and technical limitations of the use of voice for criminological and security applications are
outlined and areas for further research are defined.

Information
Library
Documents
[img]
Preview
fhfoomanyfinalthesis.pdf - Accepted Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives.

Download (3MB) | Preview
Statistics

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

Add to AnyAdd to TwitterAdd to FacebookAdd to LinkedinAdd to PinterestAdd to Email