The participants, which included six groups from both
academia and the commercial sector, were given a large data set and
asked to create algorithms that scan the information and make
identifying people easier based on their body art.
Some of the tasks in the challenge included
developing algorithms that can do things like identify an image that
contains a tattoo, or matching an image of body art with an image of
person who has the same tattoo.
So why is the government trying to improve its tattoo-based recognition technology?
Well, for starters its current process for using body art data is incredibly outdated, said Mai Ngan, a computer scientist for NIST who helped organize the event.
“Right now, law enforcement collects tattoos and labels
them using a text-based approach. But that method is not working for a
number of reasons,” Ngan told Business Insider.
Currently, law enforcement has been assigning keyword
labels to tattoos in a database to help identify people. But that system
isn’t really effective because examiners describe tattoos differently
or they simply aren’t filling out information about the tattoo at all,
Ngan said.
Because the current system is so flawed, there’s a need for automated image-based tattoo matching technology to be adopted.
But the government also
wants to improve the system because tattoos can prove helpful in
identifying criminals or victims when there isn’t much other biometric
data available.
“Tattoos have been used for a long, long time to help
with the identification of people and also for investigative research,”
Ngan said.
“Tattoos aren’t what we call a primary biometric, so
they aren’t a fingerprint or an iris. They can’t uniquely identify a
person. But in the cases where you don’t have a face or a fingerprint,
tattoos are helping cold cases to progress the investigation,” Ngan
said.
While one in five in the U.S. currently have some
sort of body ink, the rate of tattoos among criminals is much higher,
which is a big reason why law enforcement has taken such an interest in
the technology, she said.
However, improving the
current system doesn’t mean that the government wants to keep tabs on everyone who has a tattoo. Most of the tattoo data is collected when
someone is arrested and booked, Ngan said.
“The government doesn’t have plans to collect
everyone who has a tattoo,” Ngan said. “We don't want to judge, just
because you have a tattoo doesn’t mean you are a criminal.”
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