Body BONANZA.Your body's uniqueness isn't limited to your eyes. Scientists are exploring a variety of body features as future IDs: Imagine opening your mouth and gabbing as a way of proving who you are. The biometrics ID system is called voice verification. You speak a certain phrase into a microphone several times to ensure accuracy: "I am John Doe John Doe formerly, any plaintiff; now just anybody. [Am. Pop. Usage: Brewer Dictionary, 329] See : Everyman . Verify me." A computer then translates the sounds into fenones, individual sounds produced by the human voice that vary from person to person, but are consistent for each person's normal speech. A computer records each Individual fenone as data: how many times, how strong, and how high each fenone is pronounced. When you repeat the phrase as a form of ID, the computer searches for a match. Voice verification Involves the same process your brain uses to recognize human voices--but can your brain recognize 10 million voices! Voice verification systems can. But some experts are concerned that changes in a user's voice due to different moods or sickness, for example, can alter the system's accuracy. The marketable advantage of voice verification is that it can be done by phone. For example, employees of Microsoft Corporation (company) Microsoft Corporation - The biggest supplier of operating systems and other software for IBM PC compatibles. Software products include MS-DOS, Microsoft Windows, Windows NT, Microsoft Access, LAN Manager, MS Client, SQL Server, Open Data Base Connectivity (ODBC), MS Mail, can access the company's computer systems using voice verification over the phone. The future is just a phone call away! Fingerprint ID is gaining widespread use as positive: proof for ID in high-security buildings, like the Louvre Museum Louvre Museum National museum and art gallery of France, in Paris. It was built as a royal residence, begun under Francis I in 1546 on the site of a 12th-century fortress. in Paris, France. Also, more than 40,000 computers produced by Compaq have been sold with built-in fingerprint readers to let users log on without passwords. A print reader photographs any one of your 10 fingerprints. A computer then analyzes the picture for the minutia mi·nu·ti·a n. pl. mi·nu·ti·ae A small or trivial detail: "the minutiae of experimental and mathematical procedure" Frederick Turner. points--intersection points of the ridges, whorls, and valleys that form a unique pattern on each fingertip fin·ger·tip n. The extreme end or tip of a finger. . Much like iris recognition Iris recognition is a method of biometric authentication that uses pattern recognition techniques based on high-resolution images of the irides of an individual's eyes. Not to be confused with another less prevalent ocular-based technology, retina scanning, iris recognition uses , a computer places the photograph on a two. dimensional grid and translates the points into a digital code. Next time you place your finger on the reader, a scanner reads the fingerprint, and the computer matches it with the original code. However, worn fingertips "Fingertips" is a 1963 number-one hit single recorded live by "Little" Stevie Wonder for Motown's Tamla label. Wonder's first hit single, "Fingertips" was the first live, non-studio recording to reach number-one on the Billboard Pop Singles chart in the United States. or cuts can affect the system's accuracy. As long as computers can translate body features into codes, anything unique can serve as an ID, even your body odor body odor A malodorous body scent. Cf Flatulance, Halitosis. . A recent study confirms that 10-year-olds identify and distinguish others through smell. Could this be another possible biometrics ID system? If humans can ID each other through smell, computers may be able to do it, too. Science at Our Fingertips Look at each of your fingertips. Which types of fingerprint do you have? 1. Arch 2. Delta 3. Loop with right origin 4. Loop with left origin 5. Spiral/Whorl |
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