Thursday, December 4, 2008

CyberExtruder Gets 2D to 3D Face Patent

At the end of November, CyberExtruder announced that the company had been granted a new patent on their process for creating reliable 3D models of a person’s face from a single or series of 2D images.




Though the enforceability of this patent has yet to be tested, CyberExtruder’s 2D-to-3D conversion is certainly an important innovation to the security and biometrics technology industries. Why? It enables better matching between offline photographs and surveillance video. While the matching of "watch list" images against surveillance video has traditionally achieved mixed results as a result of inadequate lighting, angle, expression, etc., this patent could signify a leap forward in terms of the quality and value of 3D facial images.

In June of 2007, I wrote on how XID was using a similar technology in the “world’s largest” facial recognition access control project. In that instance, XID literally generated hundreds of thousands of variants of an enrolled employee’s face rather than using just a single 2D photo converted to a 3D model. Each day when an employee arrived for work, his or her photo would be taken and compared to the database of generated images rather than a single original. Interestingly, this approach generated huge improvements in the performance and accuracy of the Thailand access control system.



We’ll see if these two companies come into conflict over the new patent, but I don’t think they will. XID’s approach to 2D-to-3D is very different than CyberExtruder's-- almost quick and dirty by comparison. CyberExtruder, on the other hand, has become famous for its hyper-realistic…if sometimes creepy…generated floating 3D heads that lend themselves to applications well beyond security including gaming and movies, and even boast a fan in Phillip Rosedale of SecondLife.

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