Palmprints are of considerable interest as a reliable biometric, since they offer significant advantages, such as greater user acceptance than fingerprint or iris recognition. 2D systems can be spoofed by a photograph of a hand; however, 3D avoids this by recovering and analysing 3D textures and profiles. 3D palmprints can also be captured in a contactless manner, which is critical for ensuring hygiene (something that is particularly important in relation to pandemics such as COVID-19), and ease of use. The gap in prior work, between low resolution wrinkle studies and high-resolution palmprint recognition, is bridged here using high-resolution non-contact photometric stereo. A camera and illuminants are synchronised with image capture to recover high-definition 3D texture data from the palm, which are then analysed to extract ridges and wrinkles. This novel low-cost approach, which can tolerate distortions inherent to unconstrained contactless palmprint acquisition, achieved a 0.1% equ
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