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HEIGHT. and. Angle. Fingerprint Scanner Height and Angle Study. Mary Theofanos Brian Stanton Ross Micheals Charles Sheppard Karen Marshall Nien-Fan Zhang John Wydler Larry Nadel ( Noblis ) Willie Rubin ( Noblis ). Question. Given current surface heights, what is the “best” angle?.

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  1. HEIGHT and Angle Fingerprint Scanner Height and Angle Study Mary Theofanos Brian Stanton Ross Micheals Charles Sheppard Karen Marshall Nien-Fan Zhang John Wydler Larry Nadel(Noblis) Willie Rubin (Noblis)

  2. Question Given current surface heights, what is the “best” angle?

  3. Experimental Design • 4 Angles • 0° • 10° • 20° • 30° • Slap Order • Right Slap, Right Thumb, Left Slap, Left Thumb, Both Thumbs • Left Slap, Left Thumb, Right Slap, Right Thumb, Both Thumbs • 3 Heights • 39” • 45” • 49” 49” 45” 39”

  4. Experimental Design • One person gets one height • Each person gets every angle (counter balanced) • Right/Left start Randomly Selected 49” 45” 39”

  5. Equipment Adjustable Table Angle Adjustment

  6. Data 12 prints/angle × 4 angles = 48 prints/height × 20 people (120 people total) = 960 prints per height × 3 heights = 2,880 prints/scanner × 2 scanners = 5,760 total prints

  7. Question Given current surface heights, what is the “best” angle? • Best = • Efficient —Timing — Time to complete task • Effective — Quality — How good were the prints • Satisfaction — Comfort — Questionnaire

  8. Demographics

  9. Participants • Scanner B • 60 participants • 20 for each Height • 27 women and 33 men • Age ranged from 17 to 76 • Scanner A • 66 participants • 22 for each height • 31 women and 35 men • Age ranged from 17 to 73

  10. Heights with shoes Our mean height (with shoes)Scanner A Men = 5’ 10” Women = 5’ 5” Scanner B Men = 5’ 9” Women = 5’ 6” CDC mean height for men 5’ 9” mean height for women 5’ 3”

  11. Handedness • Scanner B • 80% right handed • 20 % left or ambidextrous • Scanner A • 88% right handed • 12% left or ambidextrous (literature states 87% of general population is right handed and remaining 13% is left and ambidextrous)

  12. Preferred Starting Hand • Scanner A • 79 % preferred to start with right hand • 21 % preferred to start with left hand • Scanner B • 82 % preferred to start with right hand • 19 % preferred to start with left hand

  13. Efficiency Timing

  14. Scanner A Timing Opportunity (“please place your hand on the scanner”) Participant presents Attempt starts System starts capture System Capture Attempt System ends capture (“Please remove hand from scanner”) Attempt ends Participant Next attempt (acceptable attempt) Capture thresholding Time

  15. Scanner B Timing Opportunity (“please place your hand on the scanner”) Participant presents Attempt starts System Capture Attempt System ends Attempt (“Please remove hand from scanner”) Attempt ends Participant Next attempt (acceptable attempt) Capture thresholding Time

  16. Timing — Median Times per Slap Scanner A

  17. Timing — Median Times per Slap Scanner B

  18. Timing • No significant affect due to angle or height

  19. Timing — Mean Times Scanner A

  20. Timing — Mean Times Scanner B

  21. Effectiveness Quality

  22. Quality Measures • NIST Fingerprint Imaging Software • Segmentation • Image Quality

  23. Quality Analysis - Angle • Three levels of analysis • Slap NFIQ (Composite score for a slap) — Medians • Individual finger NFIQ — Medians • Individual finger NFIQ frequencies

  24. Slap NFIQ for Angles (Composite score for a slap) — Medians Angle is not significant

  25. Individual Finger NFIQ for Angles— Medians Angle is not significant

  26. Individual Finger NFIQ Frequencies — Angles Angle is not significant

  27. Quality Results • No significant affect due to angle

  28. Quality Analysis - Height • Three levels of analysis • Slap NFIQ (Composite score for a slap) — Medians • Individual finger NFIQ — Medians • Individual finger NFIQ frequencies

  29. Scanner A Slap NFIQ for Height (Composite score for a slap) — Medians Height is significant

  30. Scanner B Slap NFIQ for Height (Composite score for a slap) — Medians Height is significant

  31. Scanner A Individual Finger NFIQ for Height — Medians

  32. Scanner B Individual Finger NFIQ for Height — Medians

  33. Scanner A Individual Finger Frequencies — Height

  34. Scanner A Individual Finger Frequencies — Height

  35. Slap NFIQ — Counter Height • Significant differences among counter height • Mixed results between scanners

  36. US visit quality scoring. NFIQ 1 or 2 NFIQ 1 or 2 or 3

  37. US visit quality scoring.

  38. satisfaction Most and Least Comfortable Angle

  39. Scanner A Most Comfortable Angles • At49” : • 64 % preferred 30°

  40. Scanner B Most Comfortable Angle • 39” Preferred: • 10 % for 0° or 10° • 25 % for 20° • 55 % for 30° • 49” Preferred: • 10 % for 0° or 10° • 20 % for 20° • 55 % for 30° • 5 % no preference

  41. Most Comfortable Angle

  42. Scanner A Least Comfortable Angles • 39” Least Comfortable: • 50 % for 0° • 32 % for 30° • 9 % for 20° • 5 % for 10° • 45” Least Comfortable: • 68 % for 0° • 32 % for 30° • 49” Least Comfortable : • 68 % for 0° • 32 % for 30°

  43. Scanner B Least Comfortable Angle • 39” Least Comfortable: • 50 % for 0° • 15 % for 10° • 5 % for 20° • 30 % for 30 ° • 45” Least Comfortable: • 70 % for 0° • 30 % for 30° • 49” Least Comfortable • 80 % for 0° • 20 % for 30°

  44. Least Comfortable Angle

  45. satisfaction Thumb Preference

  46. Scanner A Thumb Preferences • 45” • 59 % preferred single thumbs • 23 % preferred both • 18 % did not indicate a preference • 49” • 82 % preferred single thumbs • 9 % preferred both • 9 % did not indicate a preference

  47. Scanner B Thumb Preferences • 39” • 25 % preferred single thumbs • 60 % preferred both • 15 % did not indicate a preference

  48. Thumb Preferences

  49. Print Rotation

  50. Thumb Rotation Scanner A Rotation is consistent across all heights and angles

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