INESC TEC Science Bits #6 Biometric recognition

Published: July 29, 2020, 4:04 p.m.

b'INESC TEC Science Bits\\xa0is a podcast, produced by INESC TEC and Engenharia R\\xe1dio, which aims to shed a light on the latest trends in science and technology, trying to dive deeper in each subject with the help of INESC TEC experts and researchers.
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\\nIn the last episode of Science Bits before the holidays, we talked about biometric recognition, with two researchers from INESC TEC\\u2019s Centre for Telecommunications and Multimedia.
\\nBiometry literally means \\u201cmeasurement of life\\u201d and, in this episode, Filipa Sequeira and Jo\\xe3o Pinto explain why this area could be one of the key facilitators of the world\\u2019s digital transformation. A more convenient and safer world. However, since \\u201cmostly everything can be used for good and evil; the world will keep on turning\\u201d, the researchers also highlight the challenges inherent in biometrics. Don’t miss this episode. We will be back in September. Happy holidays!
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\\nAna Filipa Sequeira\\xa0(PhD)\\xa0has a PhD in Electrical and Computers Engineering, a First Degree (5-year) in Mathematics and Master\\u2019s Degree in the same field, all\\xa0from the University of Porto. Ana Filipa works as assistant researcher at INESC TEC, in the field of computer vision and machine learning. In the past, she worked at the University of Reading, UK, collaborating in EU projects related to the application of biometric recognition in Border Control (FASTPASS and PROTECT projects). Moreover, Ana Filipa had a short-term collaboration with the company Iris Guard UK, researching vulnerabilities and\\xa0developing a proof-of-concept of a robust iris\\xa0anti-spoofing measure for their\\xa0EyePay\\xae Technology.\\xa0Ana Filipa also led the development of several biometric databases, managed biometric competitions and co-authored several research publications.
\\nAna\\u2019s research includes liveness detection techniques (for iris, face and fingerprint), biometric recognition for border control, facial analysis topics, such as emotion recognition, image compliance with standardisation requirements and interpretability of AI for biometrics, among others.
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\\nJo\\xe3o Pinto holds an integrated Master\\u2019s (Bachelor and Master) degree in Bioengineering, a branch of Biomedical Engineering focused on a wide array of subjects related to healthcare and engineering, such as sensors and electronics, signal and image processing, computer aided diagnosis, medical instruments, robotics and bionics, mobile programming and software engineering.
\\nHe is currently a Research Assistant at CTM – INESC TEC and a PhD student at FEUP, conducting research in signal and image analysis, combined with machine learning for pattern recognition applications. His work focuses mainly on biometrics, for human identification and authentication, using electrocardiographic signals from off-the-person, highly noisy, unconstrained, and seamless acquisition settings.
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