Biomedical Data Mining For Web Page Relevance
Biomedical Data Mining For Web Page Relevance
PAGE RELEVANCE
Countries that plan to use biometric recognition for deduplication and/or authentication can chose from a
variety of biometric characteristics (i.e., “modes”). In general biometrics fall into two major categories:
Biological: fingerprints, face, iris, veins, etc.
Behavioral: keystroke dynamics, gait, signature, voice, etc.
DIFFERENT BIOMETRIC MODES
Accuracy: The accuracy with which the technology matches records. This includes the false match rate
(FMR) and false non-match rate (FNMR) of the technology.
Universality. The presence and ease-of-capture of the biometric in members of the relevant population and
in a variety of climates and weather conditions. Certain biometrics (like fingerprints) may be poor or
damaged among certain groups and can lead to a failure to capture (FTC) a biometric sample or failure to
enroll (FTE), as can adverse weather conditions, such as direct sunlight.
Stability. The permanence of the biometric over time (e.g., for children, or the elderly) or after disease or
injury.
Collectability. The ease with which good quality samples can be acquired.
Usability. The ease with which individuals can interact with the technology used to capture the biometric
data and its utility for different purposes (e.g., some biometric modes may be more convenient for
authentication than others)
Cost. The hardware and software costs of collecting and matching samples during initial registration and—if
used for authentication—at points of transaction.
More accuracy. More data points (e.g., fingerprints and iris scans or fingerprints and face) help ensure
statistical uniqueness to a higher degree of accuracy, which may be necessary in large populations
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