While negative headlines around facial recognition tend to dominate the media landscape, positive impacts of facial recognition technology are being created on a daily basis -- despite these stories often being overshadowed by the negative noise. It is the mission of industry leaders in computer vision, bio-metric and facial recognition technologies to help the public see how this technology can solve a range of human problems.
In fact, the industry as a whole is tasked with advocating for clear and sensible regulation, all while applying guiding principles to the design, development and distribution of the technologies they are pursuing. AI solutions are solving real-world problems, with a special focus on deploying this technology for good.
In this eWEEK Data Points article, Dan Grimm, VP of Computer Vision and GM of SAFR, a RealNetworks company, uses his own industry information to describe five use cases on the socially beneficial side of facial recognition.
Data Point No. 1: Facial Recognition for School Safety
With school security a top priority for parents, teachers and communities, ensuring a safe space is vitally important. It can be difficult to always monitor who’s coming and going, and school administrators need a way to streamline secure entry onto campus property.
K-12 schools are using facial recognition for secure access--a system that requires a person to be an authorized individual (such as teachers and staff)--in order to gain access to the building. This not only helps keep students safe but also makes it easier for parents and faculty staff to enter school grounds during non-peak hours.
Facial recognition is being used to alert staff when threats, concerns or strangers are present on school grounds. Any number of security responses can be configured for common if-this-then-that scenarios, including initiating building lockdowns and notifying law enforcement, when needed.
Data Point No. 2: Facial Recognition for Health Care
As our population grows, so does the need for more efficient healthcare. Plain and simple, there simply isn’t time in busy physician offices for mistakes or delays. Facial recognition is revolutionizing the healthcare industry, whether it be AI-powered screenings and diagnoses, or utilizing secure access.
Healthcare professionals are using facial recognition technologies in some patient screening procedures. For example, the technology is being used to identify changes to facial features over time, which in some cases represent symptoms of illnesses that might otherwise require extensive tests to diagnose--or worse, go unnoticed.
Data Point No. 3: Facial Recognition for Disaster Response and Recovery
When first responders arrive on the scene of an emergency, they’re looked to as calming forces among the chaos. With every moment critical, time is precious as each second could spell the difference between favorable and unfavorable outcomes.
A first responder outfitted with a facial recognition bodycam could quickly scan a disaster site for matches to a database of victims. This piece of technology has the ability to immediately know the names of victims, which enables first responders to deliver more efficient care, transform outcomes and deliver faster peace of mind to family members awaiting news of their loved ones.
In critical-care situations, knowing the blood types of each resident in a disaster zone when identified by first responders could in turn, save more lives. This application would require the victims' family members to provide photos and blood type information so the emergency responders could scan the disaster area for the blood types needed.
Data Point No. 4: Facial Recognition for Assisting the Blind
In our media-driven world, it can be challenging for blind persons to gain access to information. Finding ways to translate visual information into aural cues to make data more easily accessible has the potential to be life changing.
Facial recognition apps highly tuned to facial expressions help blind persons read body language; specifically, an app equipped with this technology would enable a person to “see” a smile by facing their mobile phones outward. When someone around them is smiling, the phone vibrates--a transformative experience for someone who has not only never seen a smile but also has to work extra hard to detect with other senses as to whether the people around him/her are smiling.
Another mobile app is geared toward achieving greater situational awareness for the blind, announcing physical obstacles like a chair or a dog along the way, as well as reading exit signs and currency values when shopping. This not only enables blind persons to navigate their surroundings more efficiently, but also gives them greater control and confidence to go about their everyday life without those accustomed hurdles.
Data Point No. 5: Facial Recognition for Missing Persons
From runaways to victims of abduction and child trafficking, it’s believed that tens of thousands of kids go missing every year. This statistic is unacceptable, especially in spite of our digitally connected world. It is up to us, as technology entrepreneurs, to find new ways to work with local authorities to protect our most vulnerable demographic.
Facial recognition is addressing the missing persons crisis in India. In New Delhi, police reportedly traced nearly 3,000 missing children within four days of kickstarting a new facial recognition system. Using a custom database, the system matched previous images of missing kids with about 45,000 current images of kids around the city.
Because children tend to change in appearance significantly as they mature, facial recognition technology has also been used with images of missing children to identify them years -- or even decades -- later. Parents and guardians provide local authorities with the last known photos they have of their children, and police match those against a missing persons database. Police can then search local shelters, homeless encampments and abandoned homes with this advanced technology, giving parents hope long after investigations have seemingly stalled.
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