Checkpoint technologyGait-recognition biometric technology to help soldiers manning checkpoints
SET Corporation is developing a technology which directs low-power radar beams at people — who can be 50 yards or more away; early research indicates that this method could one day be augmented with video-analysis software that spots bombers by discerning subtle differences in gait that occur when people carry heavy objects
Karen Nitkin writes in Technology Review that a new radar-imaging technology expected to reach market later this year could solve the problem by directing low-power radar beams at people — who can be 50 yards or more away — and analyzing reflected radar returns to reveal concealed objects. Early research indicates that this method could one day be augmented with video-analysis software that spots bombers by discerning subtle differences in gait that occur when people carry heavy objects.
This technology is helped by novel technology that tracks the subject — thereby enabling the radar to be continuously aimed at the moving person. Software developed by Rama Chellappa, a professor in the department of electrical and computer engineering and a member of the University of Maryland’s Institute for Advanced Computer Studies, uses a form of “gait recognition” to do this. It notes a person’s walking style and physical attributes such as height, then uses those features to follow individuals as they move and locate them again even after they’ve been obscured by poles or other objects. “Rama’s technology in its most