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Facial Recognition: Current Capabilities, Future Prospects, and Governance

Completed

A National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine study will assess current capabilities, future possibilities, societal implications, and governance of facial recognition (FR) technologies. The study will address current use cases, explain how facial recognition technologies operate, and the legal, social, and ethical issues implicated by their use.

Description

A National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine study will assess current capabilities, future possibilities, societal implications, and governance of facial recognition (FR) technologies. It will:

  • Provide a broadly accessible explanation of FR technologies, their relationship to artificial intelligence and machine learning technologies, applications of FR technologies, and interactions and interoperability of FR technologies with other systems;
  • Review existing governmental and other efforts aimed at explaining the workings and implications of FR technologies;
  • Assess the strengths, capabilities, risks and limitations of FR technologies, to include measures of performance and cost and differential accuracy across subpopulations (e.g., across races, genders, and ages);
  • Consider current approaches to governing the use of FR technologies in law enforcement, non-law enforcement, and other common use cases and describe implications of the use of FR technology and requirements for adequate safeguards;
  • Consider concerns about the impacts of FR technologies in public and private settings on privacy, civil liberties, and human rights, including issues of usability, equity, fairness, privacy, consent, community interests, and other societal considerations affecting FR acceptability; and
  • Develop recommendations to govern the use and performance of facial recognition technologies in ways that could increase quality and efficiency, increase public safety, and safeguard privacy, civil liberties, and human rights.

Collaborators

Committee

Co-Chair

Co-Chair

Member

Member

Member

Member

Member

Member

Member

Member

Member

Member

Member

Member

Brendan Roach

Staff Officer

Sponsors

Department of Homeland Security

Federal Bureau of Investigation

Staff

Jon Eisenberg

Lead

JEisenbe@nas.edu

Brendan Roach

Lead

BRoach@nas.edu

Steven Kendall

SKendall@nas.edu

Emily Backes

EBackes@nas.edu

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