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Retina
The retina is a thin layer of cells at the back of the eyeball of vertebrates. It is the part of the eye which converts light into nervous signals. The retina contains photoreceptor cells (rods and cones) which receive the light; the resulting neural signals then undergo complex processing by other neurons of the retina, and are transformed into action potentials in retinal ganglion cells whose axons form the optic nerve. The retina not only detects light, it also plays a significant part in visual perception. In embryonal development, the retina and the optic nerve originate as outgrowths of the brain. The unique structure of the blood vessels in the retina has been used for biometric identification.
To brain
The retina, in the back of your eye, has cells that are sensitive to light. They connect directly to your brain.
Biometrics which analyze the complex and unique characteristics of the eye can be divided into two different fields:
iris biometrics - iris is the colored band of tissue that surrounds the pupil of the eye. retina biometrics - retina is the layer of blood vessels at the back of the eye.
An iris recognition system uses a video camera to capture the sample while the software compares the resulting data against stored templates.
Iris recognition systems use small, high-quality cameras to capture a black and white highresolution photograph of the iris. This process takes only one to two seconds and provides the details of the iris that are mapped, recorded and stored for future matching/verification Once the image is captured, the iris elastic connective tissuecalled the trabecular meshworkis analyzed, processed into an optical fingerprint, and translated into a digital form. Given the stable physical traits of the iris, this technology is considered to be one of the safest, fastest, and most accurate, noninvasive biometric technologies. The iris is differentiated by several characteristics including ligaments, furrows, ridges, crypts, rings, corona, freckles, and a sigzag collarette.
An Iris Reader
Iris
The inner edge of the iris is located by an iris-scan algorithm which maps the iris distinct patterns and characteristics. Iris are composed before birth and, except in the event of an injury to the eyeball, remain unchanged throughout an individuals lifetime. Iris patterns are extremely complex, carry an astonishing amount of information and have over 200 unique spots. The fact that an individuals right and left eyes are different and that patterns are easy to capture, establishes iris-scan technology as one of the biometrics that is very resistant to false matching and fraud.
The false acceptance rate for iris recognition systems is 1 in 1.2 million, statistically better than the average fingerprint recognition system. The real benefit is in the falserejection rate, a measure of authenticated users who are rejected. Fingerprint scanners have a 3 percent false-rejection rate, whereas iris scanning systems boast rates at the 0 percent level
Eyeglasses and contact lenses present no problems to the quality of the image and the iris-scan systems test for a live eye by checking for the normal continuous fluctuation in pupil size.
The fact that the retina is small, internal, and difficult to measure makes capturing its image more difficult than most biometric technologies. An individual must position the eye very close to the lens of the retina-scan device, gaze directly into the lens, and remain perfectly still while focusing on a revolving light while a small camera scans the retina through the pupil. Any movement can interfere with the process and can require restarting. Enrollment can easily take more than a minute. The generated template is only 96 bytes, one of the smallest of the biometric technologies. It is one of the most accurate and most reliable of the biometric technologies, and it is used for access control in government and military environments that require very high security, such as nuclear weapons and research sites. However, the great degree of effort and cooperation required of users has made it one of the least deployed of all the biometric technologies. Newer, faster, better retina recognition technologies are being developed.