I 4347 Copyright © 2015, IGI Global. Copying or distributing in print or electronic forms without written permission of IGI Global is prohibited. Category: IT Security and Ethics DOI: 10.4018/978-1-4666-5888-2.ch427 Newborn Recognition Using Multimodal Biometric INTRODUCTION The problem of missing children is a very serious is- sue throughout the world and seeing the importance of this issue, May 25 is observed as National Missing Children’s Day. Reliability and efficiency for newborn recognition are key to the stringent security require- ments to control mixing, swapping, kidnapping and illegal adoption of newborn. The level of security is very crucial issue in maternity ward and the problem of missing and swapping of newborn is of prime concern to the persons involved and affected. There is a com- mon perception in the society that nothing can be done to prevent this unfortunate tragedy. In comparison to developed nations the developing countries are facing more challenges because of overcrowding and scarcity of medical facilities in the hospital. Recognition of newborns at birth is a critical issue for hospitals, birthing centers and other institutions where multiple births occur. With approximately 300,000 newborns born worldwide each day, a large hospital may experience over one hundred new births each day. A large hospital may see as many as a hun- dred new newborns each day. Correct recognition of newborns is essential to ensure that each mother travels home with her own child. Situations like these could be avoided or consider- ably reduced, if reliable and fast methods of recognition for newborns were made available and used inside maternity ward, hospital, bus station and airports. The prime concern is that how the parents can be assured that their newborn will not be mixed up in hospital. The technique of the recognition procedure explained to identify newborn, hangs the peace of mind of the parents until such time as the newborn shows unmis- takable evidences of its parentage. Existing biometric and non-biometric methods fail to provide enough level of security and research done to solve this problem is very minimal. Biometrics is a technology which is expected to replace traditional authentication methods which are easy to be stolen, forgotten and duplicated. The use of biometrics may provide parents the peace of mind knowing that they now have a means of proving that the child, they are carrying home is their own child after the birth. But it is surprising that so little research for newborn recogni- tion is reported, while biometric recognition of adults receives so much funding for research and development. Following are the strong reasons to study biometric technique for newborn personal authentication: Every year 80-90 million newborn come into the world and the total population of newborn and young children at the age of 0-5 years is around 400-500 million (Wei et al., 2011). With such a large population, this group cannot be ignored by biometric researchers otherwise whole architecture of biometrics technique is incomplete. Shrikant Tiwari Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), India Santosh Kumar Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), India Sanjay Kumar Singh Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), India Aruni Singh Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), India