Not exact matches
Aggarwal was inspired by a
facial - recognition technique called sparse representation, which matches an
image of a face by
comparing it with combinations of individual features from faces already recorded in a database.
Users can enter a link to an
image into a search field on its site, which then uses
facial identification technology to
compare the face in the photo against its database of 475K registered sex offenders.
One of the ways to do this is by
comparing selected
facial features from the
image with a
facial database.
A portion of the A11 Bionic chip's neural engine — protected within the Secure Enclave — transforms the depth map and infrared
image into a mathematical representation and
compares that representation to the enrolled
facial data.