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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Accuracy and reliability of forensic latent fingerprint decisions

TLDR
This study is the first large-scale study of the accuracy and reliability of latent print examiners’ decisions, in which 169 latentprint examiners each compared approximately 100 pairs of latent and exemplar fingerprints from a pool of 744 pairs.
Abstract
The interpretation of forensic fingerprint evidence relies on the expertise of latent print examiners. The National Research Council of the National Academies and the legal and forensic sciences communities have called for research to measure the accuracy and reliability of latent print examiners’ decisions, a challenging and complex problem in need of systematic analysis. Our research is focused on the development of empirical approaches to studying this problem. Here, we report on the first large-scale study of the accuracy and reliability of latent print examiners’ decisions, in which 169 latent print examiners each compared approximately 100 pairs of latent and exemplar fingerprints from a pool of 744 pairs. The fingerprints were selected to include a range of attributes and quality encountered in forensic casework, and to be comparable to searches of an automated fingerprint identification system containing more than 58 million subjects. This study evaluated examiners on key decision points in the fingerprint examination process; procedures used operationally include additional safeguards designed to minimize errors. Five examiners made false positive errors for an overall false positive rate of 0.1%. Eighty-five percent of examiners made at least one false negative error for an overall false negative rate of 7.5%. Independent examination of the same comparisons by different participants (analogous to blind verification) was found to detect all false positive errors and the majority of false negative errors in this study. Examiners frequently differed on whether fingerprints were suitable for reaching a conclusion.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The forensic confirmation bias: Problems, perspectives, and proposed solutions.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe classic psychological research on primacy, expectancy effects, and observer effects, all of which indicate that context can taint people's perceptions, judgments, and behaviors.
Patent

Display panel and display device

TL;DR: In this paper, a display panel and a display device are provided, and the display panel comprises a central region and peripheral regions, where the peripheral regions are provided at two opposite ends of the display and have a first curvature.
Journal ArticleDOI

Orientation Field Estimation for Latent Fingerprint Enhancement

TL;DR: Experimental results on the challenging NIST SD27 latent fingerprint database and an overlapped latent fingerprints database demonstrate the advantages of the proposed orientation field estimation algorithm over conventional algorithms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Repeatability and Reproducibility of Decisions by Latent Fingerprint Examiners

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluated intra-examiner repeatability by retesting 72 examiners on comparisons of latent and exemplar fingerprints, after an interval of approximately seven months; each examiner was reassigned 25 image pairs for comparison, out of total pool of 744 image pairs.
Posted Content

Invalid Forensic Science Testimony and Wrongful Convictions

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the forensic science testimony by prosecution experts in the trials of innocent persons, all convicted of serious crimes, who were later exonerated by post-conviction DNA testing.
References
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Book

Strengthening forensic science in the United States : a path forward

Law Policy
TL;DR: Strengthening Forensic Science in the United States: A Path Forward provides a detailed plan for addressing these needs and suggests the creation of a new government entity, the National Institute of Forensic Science, to establish and enforce standards within the forensic science community as discussed by the authors.
Posted Content

The Coming Paradigm Shift in Forensic Identification Science

TL;DR: Changes in the law pertaining to the admissibility of expert evidence in court, together with the emergence of DNA typing as a model for a scientifically defensible approach to questions of shared identity, are driving the older forensic sciences toward a new scientific paradigm.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Coming Paradigm Shift in Forensic Identification Science

TL;DR: The assumption of discernible uniqueness that resides at the core of forensic identification sciences is weakened by evidence of errors in proficiency testing and in actual cases as discussed by the authors, and the emergence of DNA typing as a model for a scientifically defensible approach to questions of shared identity is driving the older forensic sciences toward a new scientific paradigm.
Book

Quantitative-Qualitative Friction Ridge Analysis: An Introduction to Basic and Advanced Ridgeology

TL;DR: In this paper, the first step toward qualitative analysis of ridgeology has been taken towards a qualitative analysis in the field of Ridgeology, and the identification process of ridge identification has been described.
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