NEC Face Recognition Technology Ranks First in NIST Accuracy Testing
NEC Corporation announced that its face recognition technology has been ranked the world’s most
accurate in a benchmark test conducted by the globally recognized U.S. National
Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).
In this benchmark test, NEC received the highest
performance evaluation in "1:N Identification," which consists of still images of 12 million
different people, by achieving an authentication accuracy rate of 99.88%.
NEC also ranked first in three other tests – including an aging effects test, in which
photos taken more than 10 years prior were used for identification – and placed
in the top three in all categories of the Face Recognition Technology
Evaluation (FRTE) 1:N Identification leaderboard that are posted on the NIST
website.
Since beginning participation in 2009, NEC has
ranked first in the world multiple times in the "1:N Identification"
test, which calls for the highest accuracy of all of the face recognition
benchmarks conducted by NIST*. While working to improve the performance of its core
algorithm, NEC has simultaneously rolled out real-world implementations of face
recognition, and its face recognition business now operates in more than 50
countries and regions around the world.
NEC face recognition technology has been
implemented at approximately 80 airports worldwide and is used in applications
including immigration, customs, boarding procedures and customer service. These
applications have become one of the primary use cases of face recognition
technology. In addition, more than 1,000 organizations have adopted NeoFace
Monitor, a system that allows users to log in to their devices using face
recognition, improving both security and convenience*6. NEC also continues to be an industry leader in the
provision of face recognition cloud services, including more than 1 million
registered users in Japan.
Going forward, NEC’s aim is to increase real-world adoption of its
portfolio of biometric authentication systems, "Bio-IDiom" which includes
face recognition as a core component. NEC will continue to develop and provide
solutions for a wide range of use cases, including multimodal biometric
authentication*8, which combines face and iris recognition to reduce false positive
rates (the likelihood of authenticating the wrong person) to less than 1 in 10
billion, and gateless access control, which will improve ease-of-use by
accurately authenticating multiple people at the same time. In addition, NEC
anticipates the growth of a "self-sovereign society" in which people
control their own personal information and will increase its commitment to new
business in the web3 space, leveraging technologies such as decentralized
identity and blockchain.
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