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The Influence of the Other-Race Effect on Susceptibility to Face Morphing Attacks. (arXiv:2204.12591v1 [cs.CV])
April 28, 2022, 1:10 a.m. | Snipta Mallick, Geraldine Jeckeln, Connor J. Parde, Carlos D. Castillo, Alice J. O'Toole
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org arxiv.org
Facial morphs created between two identities resemble both of the faces used
to create the morph. Consequently, humans and machines are prone to mistake
morphs made from two identities for either of the faces used to create the
morph. This vulnerability has been exploited in "morph attacks" in security
scenarios. Here, we asked whether the "other-race effect" (ORE) -- the human
advantage for identifying own- vs. other-race faces -- exacerbates morph attack
susceptibility for humans. We also asked whether face-identification …
More from arxiv.org / cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
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