1. Use of retinal nerve fiber layer birefringence as an addition to absorption in retinal scanning for biometric purposes
- Author
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Boris I. Gramatikov, David L. Guyton, Yi Kai Wu, Kristina Irsch, and M. Agopov
- Subjects
Optics and Photonics ,Biometry ,Materials science ,Light ,Spectrophotometry, Infrared ,Materials Science (miscellaneous) ,Optic Disk ,Nerve fiber layer ,Optic disk ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Signal ,Retina ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Absorption ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Optics ,medicine ,Humans ,Business and International Management ,Birefringence ,business.industry ,Optic Nerve ,Retinal ,Equipment Design ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Optic nerve ,business ,Retinal scan - Abstract
We built a device sensitive to the birefringence of the retinal nerve fiber layer for biometric purposes. A circle of 20 degrees diameter on the retina was scanned around the optic disk with a spot of light from a 785 nm laser diode. The nonbirefringent blood vessels indenting or displacing the retinal nerve fiber layer were seen as "blips" in the measured birefringence-derived signal. For comparison, the reflection-absorption signature of the blood vessel pattern in the scanned circle was also measured. The birefringence-derived signal proved to add useful information to the reflectance-absorption signature for retinal biometric scanning.
- Published
- 2008
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