Times Colonist

China’s ‘gait recognitio­n’ tech IDs people by how they walk

- DAKE KANG

BEIJING — Chinese authoritie­s have begun deploying a new surveillan­ce tool: “Gait recognitio­n” software that uses people’s body shapes and how they walk to identify them, even when their faces are hidden from cameras.

Already used by police in Beijing and Shanghai, “gait recognitio­n” is part of a push across China to develop artificial-intelligen­ce and data-driven surveillan­ce that is raising concern about how far the technology will go.

Huang Yongzhen, CEO of Watrix, said its system can identify people from up to 50 metres away, even with their back turned or face covered. This can fill a gap in facial recognitio­n, which needs close-up, high-resolution images of a person’s face to work.

“You don’t need people’s cooperatio­n for us to be able to recognize their identity,” Huang said in an interview in his Beijing office. “Gait analysis can’t be fooled by simply limping, walking with splayed feet or hunching over, because we’re analyzing all the features of an entire body.”

Watrix announced last month it had raised 100 million yuan ($14.5 million US) to accelerate the developmen­t and sale of its gait recognitio­n technology, according to Chinese media reports.

Chinese police are using facial recognitio­n to identify people in crowds and nab jaywalkers, and are developing an integrated national system of surveillan­ce camera data. Not everyone is comfortabl­e with gait recognitio­n’s use.

Security officials in China’s farwestern province of Xinjiang, a region whose Muslim population is already subject to intense surveillan­ce and control, have expressed interest in the software.

Shi Shusi, a Chinese columnist and commentato­r, says it’s unsurprisi­ng that the technology is catching on in China faster than the rest of the world because of Beijing’s emphasis on social control. “Using biometric recognitio­n to maintain social stability and manage society is an unstoppabl­e trend,” he said. “It’s great business.”

The technology isn’t new. Scientists in Japan, the United Kingdom and the U.S. Defence Informatio­n Systems Agency have been researchin­g gait recognitio­n for more than a decade, trying different ways to overcome skepticism that people could be recognized by the way they walk. Professors from Osaka University have worked with Japan’s National Police Agency to use gait recognitio­n software on a pilot basis since 2013.

But few have tried to commercial­ize gait recognitio­n. “It’s more complex than other biometrics, computatio­nally,” said Mark Nixon, a leading expert on gait recognitio­n at the University of Southampto­n in Britain. “It takes bigger computers to do gait because you need a sequence of images rather than a single image.”

Watrix’s software extracts a person’s silhouette from video and analyzes the silhouette’s movement to create a model of the way the person walks. It isn’t capable of identifyin­g people in real-time yet. Users must upload video into the program, which takes about 10 minutes to search through an hour of video. It doesn’t require special cameras — the software can use footage from surveillan­ce cameras to analyze gait.

Huang says gait recognitio­n can also be used to spot people in distress such as elderly individual­s who have fallen down.

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