Omron's facial-recognition system uses a snapshot of your face to secure your handheld device.
Omron has developed a face-recognition technology for use as a security system in camera-enabled cell phones and other handheld devices, the company says.
The system is intended to provide an alternative to a password or fingerprint scanner for controlling access to the device, Omron says in a statement.
Users first register their own face with the system by taking a picture of themselves.
The company's "Okao Vision" engine converts the picture into a face-print that takes up about 1.5KB of storage space.
To verify identity, users must take a picture of themselves again.
It requires no additional hardware and works with image sensors already fitted into cell phones, so long as they are 100,000-pixel resolution or higher, says Takayuki Nakamura, a spokesman for Omron in Tokyo.
Versions of the software are available for the Symbian, BREW, embedded Linux, and ITRON OS platforms, according to the statement.
The application occupies about 450KB of the device's ROM and 370KB of RAM.
Cell phones and PDAs featuring fingerprint sensors are already available from several vendors.
Fujitsu offers a 3G (third-generation) cell phone in Japan with such a function and some models of Hewlett-Packard's IPaq PDAs also feature a fingerprint sensor.
With such devices holding more personal information and offering the ability to perform wireless commerce, the need for secure access is increasing.
Omron will demonstrate the system later this week at the Security Show 2005, which takes place at the Tokyo Big Sight exhibition center from March 2 until March 4.
The company did not provide an estimate for how much the system would add to the manufacturing cost of a cell phone.