State of the art: Signature verification system

Author(s):  
Tee Wilkin ◽  
Ooi Shih Yin
Author(s):  
Marcos Martinez-Diaz ◽  
Julian Fierrez ◽  
Javier Ortega-Garcia

Automatic signature verification on handheld devices can be seen as a means to improve usability in consumer applications and a way to reduce costs in corporate environments. It can be easily integrated in touchscreen devices, for example, as a part of combined handwriting and keypad-based multimodal interfaces. In the last few decades, several approaches to the problem of signature verification have been proposed. However, most research has been carried out considering signatures captured with digitizing tables, in which the quality of the captured data is much higher than in handheld devices. Signature verification on handheld devices represents a new scenario both for researchers and vendors. In this chapter, we introduce automatic signature verification as a component of multimodal interfaces; we analyze the applications and challenges of signature verification and overview available resources and research directions. A case study is also given, in which a state-of-the-art signature verification system adapted to handheld devices is presented.


2014 ◽  
Vol 24 ◽  
pp. 47-52
Author(s):  
Joanna Putz-Leszczynska

This paper addresses template ageing in automatic signature verification systems. Handwritten signatures are a behavioral biometric sensitive to the passage of time. The experiments in this paper utilized a database that contains signature realizations captured in three sessions. The last session was captured seven years after the first one. The results presented in this paper show a potential risk of using an automatic handwriting verification system without including template ageing Purchase Article for $10 


DYNA ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 87 (213) ◽  
pp. 9-16
Author(s):  
Franklin Alexander Sepulveda Sepulveda ◽  
Dagoberto Porras-Plata ◽  
Milton Sarria-Paja

Current state-of-the-art speaker verification (SV) systems are known to be strongly affected by unexpected variability presented during testing, such as environmental noise or changes in vocal effort. In this work, we analyze and evaluate articulatory information of the tongue's movement as a means to improve the performance of speaker verification systems. We use a Spanish database, where besides the speech signals, we also include articulatory information that was acquired with an ultrasound system. Two groups of features are proposed to represent the articulatory information, and the obtained performance is compared to an SV system trained only with acoustic information. Our results show that the proposed features contain highly discriminative information, and they are related to speaker identity; furthermore, these features can be used to complement and improve existing systems by combining such information with cepstral coefficients at the feature level.


Author(s):  
FRANCK LECLERC ◽  
RÉJEAN PLAMONDON

This paper is a follow up to an article published in 1989 by R. Plamondon and G. Lorette on the state of the art in automatic signature verification and writer identification. It summarizes the activity from year 1989 to 1993 in automatic signature verification. For this purpose, we report on the different projects dealing with dynamic, static and neural network approaches. In each section, a brief description of the major investigations is given.


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