Face off for best ID checkers
A face matching test聽has been updated to find super-recognisers who can help prevent errors caused by face recognition software.
A face matching test聽has been updated to find super-recognisers who can help prevent errors caused by face recognition software.
Diane Nazaroff
0424479199
diane.nazaroff@unsw.edu.au
Psychologists from 91色情片 Sydney have developed a new face identification ability test that will help find facial recognition experts for a variety of police and government agencies, including contact tracing.
The Glasgow Face Matching Test 2 [GFMT2] targets high-performing facial recognition individuals known as super-recognisers, who have an extraordinary ability to memorise and recall faces.
The type of professional roles that involve face identification and that could benefit from the test include visa processors, passport issuers, border control officers, police, contract tracers, as well as security staff in private industry.
鈥淏eing able to recognise faces of friends and family is a skill that most of us take for granted,鈥 Scientia Fellow Dr David White from 91色情片 Science鈥檚 School of Psychology says.
鈥淏ut comparing images of unfamiliar faces and deciding if they show the same person is a task that most of our participants find challenging, even passport officers with many years of experience in the task.
鈥淎 major finding in our field in recent years has been that some people are much better than others at identifying faces from photographs.
鈥淭his is an insight that has changed the way staff are recruited, for example passport and police officers.鈥
The lead investigator at 91色情片 Sydney鈥檚 Face Research Lab says the GFMT2 test is valuable for identifying who have been used by the London Metropolitan Police Service in criminal investigations, and famously in the alleged poisoning of former Russian spies in Salisbury.聽
The GFMT2 test, an expanded version of the original Glasgow Face Matching Test which was launched 10聽years ago, has been published in the journal .
It was developed in collaboration with the University of York and the Australian Passport Office.
Scientia Fellow Dr David White. Photo: Supplied.
Dr White says the current test involves matching faces across changes that make face identification difficult in real-world tasks.
鈥淔or example when matching CCTV to mugshot images, there may be changes in head angle, subject-to-camera distance, image quality and expression,鈥 he says.
It also includes tests that target low-performing face recognition individuals such as people with prosopagnosia, or 鈥榝ace blindness鈥.
The improved test comes as the federal government considers聽the of a centralised database which would host photos collected by state and federal agencies,聽including police charge and passport photos, immigration documents, and driver鈥檚 licences.
One of the of the database proposal has been that face recognition software is prone to that has resulted in wrongful arrests.
鈥淭his technology shows close matches to a suspect on a screen, and so human error at that stage can have ,鈥 Dr White says.
But super-recognisers revealed by GFMT2 can be used to review identity matches made by facial recognition software and help prevent false identity matches, he says.
鈥淭his new test is especially important in this day and age, where facial recognition software is increasingly used as a search engine in police investigation and security settings,鈥 he says.
鈥淚t is far more promising than to have these face identification skills.
鈥淥耻谤 suggests that current professional training courses in face identification do not improve people鈥檚 performance.鈥
The test will be able to be used in countries including Australia, New Zealand, UK and Canada.
鈥淲e鈥檝e learned a lot from a decade of collaboration with professional groups,鈥 Dr Rob Jenkins from the School of Psychology at the University of York says.
鈥淭he new test is a response to their requirements.鈥
The test also allows before and after comparisons to assess the impact of training and other interventions.
鈥淪cientific understanding of face perception has made tremendous advances in the last 10聽years,鈥 Professor Mike Burton from the School of Psychology at the University of York says.
鈥淭his update gave us a chance to build in new knowledge.鈥
The development of the GFMT2 test was part of an ARC Linkage Project in collaboration between 91色情片 Sydney and the Australian Passport Office (DFAT).
All tests are free for scientific use.
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