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Journal ArticleDOI

Review of: Strengthening Forensic Science in the United States: A Path Forward

J.D. Thomas L. Bohan
- 01 Mar 2010 - 
- Vol. 55, Iss: 2, pp 560-564
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This article is published in Journal of Forensic Sciences.The article was published on 2010-03-01. It has received 419 citations till now.

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Why digital forensics is not a profession and how it can become one

TL;DR: Digital forensics (DF) has existed since the 1970s when industry and government first began developing tools to investigate end users engaging in Web-enabled financial fraud as discussed by the authors, and over the next 40 years, DF evolved until, in 2010, the National Research Council ‘officially recognized DF as a forensic discipline.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Development of a Core Forensic Standards Framework for Australia

TL;DR: The development of a different approach in Australia is described, recognizing the end-to-end nature of the forensic enterprise from crime scene to the court, and a standard has been developed that is intentionally not discipline-specific.
Posted Content

End-to-End Latent Fingerprint Search

TL;DR: In this article, an end-to-end latent fingerprint search system, including automated region of interest cropping, latent image preprocessing, feature extraction, feature comparison, and outputs a candidate list, is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Using Bayesian networks to guide the assessment of new evidence in an appeal case

TL;DR: A method is provided whereby BNs can serve as a guide to not only reason with incomplete evidence in forensic cases, but also identify very specific research questions that should be addressed to extend the evidence base and solve similar issues in the future.
Journal ArticleDOI

Match Likelihood Ratio for Uncertain Genotypes

TL;DR: A match likelihood ratio (MLR) is introduced, a simple generalization of the likelihood ratio standardly used to understand the import of genetic evidence in forensic applications, and how MLR was used to explain evidence in court.
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