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Expertise in Fingerprint Identification
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Expertise in Fingerprint Identification

Matthew B. Thompson, Jason M. Tangen and Duncan J. McCarthy
Journal of forensic sciences, Vol.58(6), pp.1519-1530
2013
PMID: 23786258

Abstract

Legal Medicine Life Sciences & Biomedicine Medicine, Legal Science & Technology
Although fingerprint experts have presented evidence in criminal courts for more than a century, there have been few scientific investigations of the human capacity to discriminate these patterns. A recent latent print matching experiment shows that qualified, court-practicing fingerprint experts are exceedingly accurate (and more conservative) compared with novices, but they do make errors. Here, a rationale for the design of this experiment is provided. We argue that fidelity, generalizability, and control must be balanced to answer important research questions; that the proficiency and competence of fingerprint examiners are best determined when experiments include highly similar print pairs, in a signal detection paradigm, where the ground truth is known; and that inferring from this experiment the statement The error rate of fingerprint identification is 0.68% would be unjustified. In closing, the ramifications of these findings for the future psychological study of forensic expertise and the implications for expert testimony and public policy are considered.

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#16 Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions

Source: InCites

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
Citation topics
2 Chemistry
2.244 Chemometrics
2.244.1784 Forensic Spectroscopy
Web Of Science research areas
Medicine, Legal
ESI research areas
Clinical Medicine
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