In the search for better or new methods/techniques to visualise fingermarks or to analyse them exploiting their chemical content, fingermarks inter-variability may hinder the assessment of the method effectiveness. Variability is due to changes in the chemical composition of the fingermarks between different donors and within the same donor, as well as to differential contact time, pressure and angle. When validating a method or comparing it with existing ones, it is not always possible to account for this type of variability. One way to compensate for these issues is to employ, in the early stages of the method development, a device generating reproducible fingermarks. Here the authors present their take on such device, as well as quantitatively describing its performance and benefits against the manual production of marks. Finally a short application is illustrated for the use of this device, at the method developmental stages, in an emerging area of fingerprinting research concerning the retrieval of chemical intelligence from fingermarks.

Reed, H., Stanton, A., Wheat, J., Kelly, J., Davis, L., Rao, W., et al. (2016). The Reed-Stanton press rig for the generation of reproducible fingermarks: Towards a standardised methodology for fingermark research. SCIENCE & JUSTICE, 56(1), 9-17 [10.1016/j.scijus.2015.10.001].

The Reed-Stanton press rig for the generation of reproducible fingermarks: Towards a standardised methodology for fingermark research

Smith, A;
2016

Abstract

In the search for better or new methods/techniques to visualise fingermarks or to analyse them exploiting their chemical content, fingermarks inter-variability may hinder the assessment of the method effectiveness. Variability is due to changes in the chemical composition of the fingermarks between different donors and within the same donor, as well as to differential contact time, pressure and angle. When validating a method or comparing it with existing ones, it is not always possible to account for this type of variability. One way to compensate for these issues is to employ, in the early stages of the method development, a device generating reproducible fingermarks. Here the authors present their take on such device, as well as quantitatively describing its performance and benefits against the manual production of marks. Finally a short application is illustrated for the use of this device, at the method developmental stages, in an emerging area of fingerprinting research concerning the retrieval of chemical intelligence from fingermarks.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Ageing; Fingermarks; Press rig; Quantitative; Reproducible;
Fingermarks, Reproducible, Quantitative, Press rig, Ageing
English
2016
56
1
9
17
reserved
Reed, H., Stanton, A., Wheat, J., Kelly, J., Davis, L., Rao, W., et al. (2016). The Reed-Stanton press rig for the generation of reproducible fingermarks: Towards a standardised methodology for fingermark research. SCIENCE & JUSTICE, 56(1), 9-17 [10.1016/j.scijus.2015.10.001].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/231137
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