TY - JOUR
T1 - Systematic Literature Review
T2 - Biometric Technology Applied to Educational Institutions
AU - Necochea-Chamorro, Jorge Isaac
AU - Asalde, Carlos Manuel Sotelo
AU - Nuñez, Mariella Elizabeth Loli
AU - Valencia, Yesenia del Rosario Vasquez
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Jorge Isaac Necochea-Chamorro, Carlos Manuel Sotelo Asalde, Mariella Elizabeth Loli Nuñez & Yesenia del Rosario Vasquez Valencia; published by UIKTEN. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 License. The article is published with Open Access at https://www.temjournal.com/
PY - 2024/1/1
Y1 - 2024/1/1
N2 - Biometric technology, founded on recognizing distinctive individual features, enhances identification and automation, yielding personal and institutional benefits. This literature review employs the Kitchenham and Charters methodology to analyze recent perspectives on biometric technology in educational time and attendance. The analysis identifies benefits, such as preventing impersonation and enhancing data security, but emphasizes concerns about biometric alterations and hardware/software failures hindering optimal outcomes. A noteworthy trend is adopting a bimodal behavioral approach in biometric technologies in education. The study recommends research avenues focusing on privacy safeguards, biometric system robustness, and technological resilience. Beyond mere identification, a shift towards quantitative and descriptive methods is proposed, guiding future research. The results underscore the importance of a multimodal approach and stringent security measures to address biometric system vulnerabilities. Future exploration should consider integrating emerging technologies to enhance system resilience and data protection, providing a comprehensive guide for refining and expanding biometric technology applications in education.
AB - Biometric technology, founded on recognizing distinctive individual features, enhances identification and automation, yielding personal and institutional benefits. This literature review employs the Kitchenham and Charters methodology to analyze recent perspectives on biometric technology in educational time and attendance. The analysis identifies benefits, such as preventing impersonation and enhancing data security, but emphasizes concerns about biometric alterations and hardware/software failures hindering optimal outcomes. A noteworthy trend is adopting a bimodal behavioral approach in biometric technologies in education. The study recommends research avenues focusing on privacy safeguards, biometric system robustness, and technological resilience. Beyond mere identification, a shift towards quantitative and descriptive methods is proposed, guiding future research. The results underscore the importance of a multimodal approach and stringent security measures to address biometric system vulnerabilities. Future exploration should consider integrating emerging technologies to enhance system resilience and data protection, providing a comprehensive guide for refining and expanding biometric technology applications in education.
KW - Biometrics
KW - biometric technology
KW - education
KW - fingerprint
KW - time and attendance
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85188789114
U2 - 10.18421/TEM131-60
DO - 10.18421/TEM131-60
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85188789114
SN - 2217-8309
VL - 13
SP - 570
EP - 580
JO - TEM Journal
JF - TEM Journal
IS - 1
ER -