Special Sessions
Second International Special Session on Multivariable Processing for Biometric Systems - MPBS 2012
Co-chairs
Jordi Solé-Casals University of Vic Spain |
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Carlos Manuel Travieso-González University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Spain |
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All papers accepted in Special Sessions will be included in the conference proceedings and indexed.
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Scope
Biometric systems have been widely and mainly studied for its use in security applications. Nowadays, other applications, as biomedicine, psychology and/or forensic applications are using biometric information in order to get innovation and better successes.
Most of the today solutions however operate on different methods. The use of Multivariate Processing can reach specialized systems to provide possible best conditions for image processing.
Topics cover all biometric modalities, and multimodal systems, using any kind of sensor or range of acquisition.
Biometric systems have been widely and mainly studied for its use in security applications. Nowadays, other applications, as biomedicine, psychology and/or forensic applications are using biometric information in order to get innovation and better successes.
Most of the today solutions however operate on different methods. The use of Multivariate Processing can reach specialized systems to provide possible best conditions for image processing.
Topics cover all biometric modalities, and multimodal systems, using any kind of sensor or range of acquisition.
Special Session on Biofeedback Systems for Stress Reduction - BSSS 2012
Co-chairs
Egon L. van den Broek TNO Technical Sciences Human Media Interaction, University of Twente, Enschede Karakter University Center, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen The Netherlands |
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Gert-Jan de Vries Philips Research, Department of Healthcare Information Management The Netherlands |
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All papers accepted in Special Sessions will be included in the conference proceedings and indexed.
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Scope
Stress has been baptized "the black death of the 21st century". Whether this will become the case or not, it is evident that the number of stress related health problems increase rapidly. This special session explores biofeedback to assess this problem and compares it with traditional measures such as questionnaires and interviews.
Stress has been baptized "the black death of the 21st century". Whether this will become the case or not, it is evident that the number of stress related health problems increase rapidly. This special session explores biofeedback to assess this problem and compares it with traditional measures such as questionnaires and interviews.