A Scottish primary school has installed a biometric system that uses the
unique position of the veins in the palm of the hand to allow children to buy
their school meals.
The system, installed at
Todholm Primary
School in Paisley, maps the pupil’s vein patterns using a near-infrared beam
to confirm their identity.
The technology is being used by all children that have school dinners,
providing anonymity to those entitled to state-subsidised meals and removing the
associated social stigma.
The biometric reader automatically deducts money from children’s accounts,
which are topped up each month by parents or from subsidy funds.
Palm-vein biometric scanning was selected because it bypasses the data
protection issues of using the children’s fingerprints, says Todholm Primary
School headteacher Sandra Gibson.
‘This system gets around difficulties inherent in the use of fingerprint
scanners, and the children really like it,’ she said.
‘We could eventually link it to an online payment system so that parents
could regulate the children’s use of money at school completely.’
The system has been developed by
Fujitsu
Europe and Scottish technology company
Yarg Biometrics. Gibson says the
installation process has been simple, quick and effective.
Scottish
deputy first minister Nicol Stephen says palm-vein biometric technology has
potential well beyond school canteens and in the business sector.
‘Easy-to-use biometrics could be of value to large companies that want to
protect their premises and employees, or to hotels that want to offer guests the
benefits of keyless entry,’ he said.
But BCS biometrics expert Angela Sasse says
systems such as palm-vein recognition will only become commonplace if they are
quick and reliable.
‘A test using iris scanners at the
Venerable Bede School in Sunderland
proved to be very slow and the food was cold before the children got it, so it
was eventually abandoned,’ she said.
The system at Venerable Bede was supposed to be able to process 12 pupils a
minute, but managed only five.
‘If that happens here, people will return to using swipe cards and other
systems for checking identities,’ said Sasse.
Ovum analyst Graham Titterington says speed
is often the enemy of accuracy with biometrics.
‘Getting a reliable system at a reasonable cost with decent time to identify
is the big challenge for biometrics systems at the moment,’ he said. ‘It is also
the reason why it is taking so long for them to be developed.’
Any biometrics system used for a business would be dependent on access to
company computer systems to check identities, and IT departments must be careful
how they go about implementations, says Titterington.
‘The back-end system should be separate from front-end devices, with a
standard interface to make it easy to change one scanning system for another if
things go wrong,’ he said.
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Further Reading:
Biometrics pros and cons ... in 30 seconds
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