@inbook{2da834996c37419ea47d371d6d5318ed,
title = "Identification of the Individual",
abstract = "It is critical in any investigation that any individual who has committed a crime can be positively identified. Identification can be achieved through the analysis of DNA or, as explored here in this chapter, using various features of the body and the impressions left by them as they can also provide a means of identification and individualisation, both for crime investigation and for biometric purposes. The principal feature used in this way is a fingerprint, and the majority of the chapter focuses on the way in which fingermarks are deposited, visualised, and photographed in order to provide an image for comparison with fingerprints held on a database. A description is also given of the approach used by examiners when conducting a fingermark comparison in criminal identification, in particular focusing on the recent attention that has been given to the potential for contextual and cognitive biases to influence decision making. Finally, an overview is given of the concept of a biometric system and the way in which biometrics such as fingerprints are enrolled onto databases. The way in which biometrics could impact on criminal investigations in the future is also discussed.",
author = "Stephen Bleay and David Charlton and Clive Reedman",
year = "2024",
month = sep,
day = "27",
doi = "10.1039/bk9781837672240-00323",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-1-83916-800-0",
series = "Crime Scene to Court",
publisher = "Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)",
pages = "323--360",
editor = "Niamh NicDaeid and White, {Peter C.}",
booktitle = "Crime Scene to Court",
}