Surveillance

Surveillance is the most challenging application of any security solution. In a surveillance situation, data is most difficult to acquire, highly skilled and experienced labor is required, environmental conditions are at their most challenging and civil liberties considerations come to the forefront.

Surveillance Systems are:
Non-Cooperative, Overt, Non-Habituated, Attended, Standard or Non-Standard, Public and Open.

+ Cooperative vs. Non-Cooperative

In applications verifying the positive claim of identity, such as access control, a deceptive user cooperates with the system in an attempt to be recognized as someone s/he is not. This is therefore called a "cooperative" application. In applications verifying a negative claim to identity (for example where one’s absence from a database allows access), the deceptive user attempts to deceive the system so as not to be identified. This is called a "non-cooperative" application. Users in cooperative applications may be asked to identify themselves in some way, perhaps with a card or a PIN, thereby limiting the database search of stored templates to that of a single claimed identity. Users in non-cooperative applications cannot be relied on to identify themselves correctly, thereby requiring the search of a large portion of the database. Cooperative, but so-called "PIN-less", verification applications also require search of the entire database.

+ Overt vs. Covert

If the user is aware that a biometric identifier is being measured, the use is overt. If unaware, the use is covert. Almost all conceivable access control and non-forensic applications are overt. Forensic applications can be covert. One could argue that this second partition dominates the first in that a deceptive user cannot cooperate or non-cooperate unless the application is overt.

+ Habituated vs. Non-Habituated

Users presenting a biometric trait on a daily basis can be considered habituated after short period of time. Users who have not presented the trait recently can be considered
"non-habituated". Access control to a secure work area is generally "habituated". Access control to a sporting event is generally "non-habituated".

+ Attended vs. Non-Attended

Refers to whether the use of the biometric device during operation will be observed and guided by system management. Non-cooperative applications will generally require supervised operation, while cooperative operation may or may not. Nearly all systems supervise the enrollment process, although some do not.

+ Standard vs. Non-Standard Environment

If the application takes place indoors at standard environmental conditions, it is considered a "standard environment" application. Outdoor systems, and perhaps some unusual indoor systems, are considered "non-standard environment" applications.

+ Public vs. Private

Will the users of the system be customers of the entity in charge of system management (public) or employees of that entity (private)? Clearly attitudes toward usage of the devices, which will directly affect performance, vary depending upon the relationship between the end-users and system management owners.

+ Open vs. Closed

Will the system be required, now or in the future, to exchange data with other biometric systems run by other management? For instance, some State social service agencies want to be able to exchange biometric information with other States. If a system is to be open, data collection, compression and format standards are required.