General Definition of Biometrics
This branch of technology has become particularly useful for safety purposes and to battle against identity theft. In order to achieve that Biometrics develops different methods to recognize individuals and to take care of their personal information.
Pre-reading activity
The teacher:
- Shows a picture of a hotel.
- Talks about the hotel giving a context to the following step:
“This is ‘Gibon’s Hotel’. It is a new hotel built in London and it is very special. Its owner is very concerned about the safety of his costumers, so he spent a lot of money in the latest technology to have the safeties hotel ever.”
- Tells a story introducing new vocabulary:
“Gibon’s Hotel hired an expert in Biometrics. Biometrics is the branch of technology that has to do with the different ways of recognizing people based on their particular and unique characteristics such as fingerprints, facial spots, voice, and eyes, among others. Gibon’s Hotel was presented as the safeties hotel and as the one that could provide full identity assurance. Identity assurance has to do with keeping safe your identity. Some thieves heard about this, and they thought it was a lie that the Hotel said to avoid robberies. These thieves decided to go there and prove that they could enter the Hotel without been recognized and steel without problems. Of course they failed because their faces, fingerprints, voices and even iris patterns were captured and recognized immediately by the machines that were installed by the experts. The thieves were taken by the police immediately because these machines proved using the database that the thieves were very dangerous. As we can see, new technology provide reliable identification, it means that you can trust without any doubts. Why? Because you don’t have to insert any number, password, PIN (that stands for Personal Identification Number) or anything, it works with unique characteristics that every human being posses and that cannot been modified or copied. ”
- Writes the new expressions on the board
- Provides the definitions again so students can clearly notice them.
The students:
- Hear the presentation of the teacher.
- Make notes (optional) of the definitions provided by the teacher.
While-reading activity.
The teacher:
- Give the student the following text to read:
Biometrics.
As we go about our daily lives, we often need to verify our identities or someone else’s identity, or otherwise determine who someone is. Reliable identification improves public safety by helping to distinguish benign members of the general public from recognized criminals and other threats. It also makes financial and business dealings safer and more efficient, if only by making the participants more accountable for their actions.As humans, we all use our natural abilities to recognize people through their voices, faces, and other characteristics. Machines, on the other hand, must be programmatically instructed how to use the same observable information to perform human recognition. Technology advances, particularly in biometrics, are helping to close the gap between human perception and machine recognition. A priority goal of the use of biometrics is to provide identity assurance- or the capability to accurately recognize individuals- with greater reliability, speed, and convenience, as well as lower cost. Biometric methods vary greatly and as the technology continues improving, new options will also come to the fore.
Why use biometrics?
There are several key reasons why biometrics is becoming increasingly popular:
- Convenient authentication: the convenience of quick-and-easy authentication makes for a smoother system of identity assurance than using keys, cards, or PINs. With biometric technology, there is nothing to lose or forget since the characteristics or traits of the person serve as the identifiers.
- Increased need for strong authentication: with today’s intense focus on greater security for logical (computer) and physical access, biometrics offers an attractive method for guarding against stolen or lost identifiers, such as cards or passwords.
- Decreased costs: over the years improvement in hardware and software technologies has brought down the costs of biometrics authentication to be affordable at the commercial market level.
Adapted from “BIOMETRICS. Identity Assurance in the Information Age” by John D. Woodward, Nicholas M. Orlans, Peter T. Higgins. http://books.google.cl/books?id=j-o_btaFK6wC&dq=biometrics&printsec=frontcover&source=bl&ots=OKXWaY2SUj&sig=cEF1OdEcdfrXM9p8syLPuqAJ5IY&hl=es&ei=vnQJS6nQNc20tgf8p9DFCg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CBEQ6AEwATgK#v=onepage&q=&f=false
- Ask the students to get the main ideas from every paragraph and to take notes of them.
The Students:
- Read the text.
- And write down the main ideas of every paragraph of the article.
The teacher:
- Give the following directions to the students:
o In pairs, the create a dialogue in which they represent a situation where Biometrics is required.
o This dialogue has to include some of the words highlighted above.
o This dialogue has to be handed in written and, afterwards it has to be played.
The Students:
- Elaborate the dialogue following the previous instructions.
Published by: - Amilka Escudero
- Pablo Vidal