4.6 Article

Improving Monocular Facial Presentation-Attack-Detection Robustness with Synthetic Noise Augmentations

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 23, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s23218914

Keywords

face; PAD; monocular; augmentation; texture; noise

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We propose a synthetic augmentation approach to improve the robustness of monocular face presentation-attack-detection (PAD) to real-world noise additions. Our toolbox of sensor and lighting effect generators generates more robust PAD features than popular augmentation methods in noisy test evaluations. Additionally, the toolbox improves accuracy on clean test data, simplifying data collection by requiring only a small portion of real data.
We present a synthetic augmentation approach towards improving monocular face presentation-attack-detection (PAD) robustness to real-world noise additions. Face PAD algorithms secure authentication systems against spoofing attacks, such as pictures, videos, and 2D-inspired masks. Best-in-class PAD methods typically use 3D imagery, but these can be expensive. To reduce application cost, there is a growing field investigating monocular algorithms that detect facial artifacts. These approaches work well in laboratory conditions, but can be sensitive to the imaging environment (e.g., sensor noise, dynamic lighting, etc.). The ideal solution for noise robustness is training under all expected conditions; however, this is time consuming and expensive. Instead, we propose that physics-informed noise-augmentations can pragmatically achieve robustness. Our toolbox contains twelve sensor and lighting effect generators. We demonstrate that our toolbox generates more robust PAD features than popular augmentation methods in noisy test-evaluations. We also observe that the toolbox improves accuracy on clean test data, suggesting that it inherently helps discern spoof artifacts from imaging artifacts. We validate this hypothesis through an ablation study, where we remove liveliness pairs (e.g., live or spoof imagery only for participants) to identify how much real data can be replaced with synthetic augmentations. We demonstrate that using these noise augmentations allows us to achieve better test accuracy while only requiring 30% of participants to be fully imaged under all conditions. These findings indicate that synthetic noise augmentations are a great way to improve PAD, addressing noise robustness while simplifying data collection.

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