Face 3.2

Previous systems were fooled by high-resolution photos, silicone masks, or even a sleeping user’s thumb. Face 3.2 requires spontaneous biological response . To authenticate, the system projects an invisible, low-amplitude near-field signal that causes the human iris to oscillate at a natural frequency of 12 Hz. A video replay or a 3D-printed head cannot replicate this involuntary oscillation.

By enabling software reuse across multiple platforms (e.g., using the same navigation software on different helicopter models), it drastically reduces procurement costs and accelerates the delivery of new capabilities to pilots. Vendor Neutrality: face 3.2

Unlike its predecessors (3.0 and 3.1), which relied primarily on structured light and 2D infrared mapping, Face 3.2 introduces . In layman's terms, the system no longer takes a single snapshot of your face. Instead, it records a 1.2-second window of micro-movements—the subtle twitch of a levator labii muscle, the 0.03-second dilation of a pupil, the asymmetric drift of a gaze. A video replay or a 3D-printed head cannot