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Ingo Bastisch
Researcher at German Criminal Police Office
Publications - 15
Citations - 337
Ingo Bastisch is an academic researcher from German Criminal Police Office. The author has contributed to research in topics: Concordance & Biology. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 14 publications receiving 276 citations.
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Recommendations of the DNA Commission of the International Society for Forensic Genetics (ISFG) on quality control of autosomal Short Tandem Repeat allele frequency databasing (STRidER).
Martin Bodner,Ingo Bastisch,John M. Butler,Rolf Fimmers,Peter Gill,Peter Gill,Leonor Gusmão,Leonor Gusmão,Leonor Gusmão,Niels Morling,Christopher Phillips,Mechthild Prinz,Peter M. Schneider,Walther Parson,Walther Parson +14 more
TL;DR: STRidER expands on the previously established ENFSI DNA WG STRbASE and applies standard concepts established for haploid and autosomal markers as well as novel tools to reduce error and increase the quality of autosomal STR data.
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European Network of Forensic Science Institutes (ENFSI): Evaluation of new commercial STR multiplexes that include the European Standard Set (ESS) of markers
Lindsey Welch,Peter Gill,Peter Gill,Christopher Phillips,Ricky Ansell,Niels Morling,Walther Parson,Jukka U. Palo,Ingo Bastisch +8 more
TL;DR: In this article, a collaborative project was organized by the European Network of Forensic Science Institutes (ENFSI) DNA working group in order to assess the new multiplex kits available.
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Manufacturer contamination of disposable plastic-ware and other reagents--an agreed position statement by ENFSI, SWGDAM and BSAG.
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Interpretation of DNA mixtures--European consensus on principles.
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Inter-laboratory study on standardized MPS libraries: evaluation of performance, concordance, and sensitivity using mixtures and degraded DNA
Petra Müller,Christian Sell,Thorsten Hadrys,Johannes Hedman,Steffi Bredemeyer,F.-X. Laurent,Lutz Roewer,Sabrina Achtruth,Maja Sidstedt,Titia Sijen,Marc Trimborn,Natalie E.C. Weiler,Sascha Willuweit,Ingo Bastisch,Walther Parson,Walther Parson +15 more
TL;DR: Results from an inter-laboratory massively parallel sequencing study demonstrate that MPS is a promising tool for human identity testing, which in return has to undergo rigorous in-house validation before it can be implemented into forensic routine casework.