Electronic fingerprinting of the dead.

Standard

Electronic fingerprinting of the dead. / Rutty, G N; Stringer, K; Türk, Elisabeth.

In: INT J LEGAL MED, Vol. 122, No. 1, 1, 2008, p. 77-80.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Rutty, GN, Stringer, K & Türk, E 2008, 'Electronic fingerprinting of the dead.', INT J LEGAL MED, vol. 122, no. 1, 1, pp. 77-80. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17295028?dopt=Citation>

APA

Vancouver

Rutty GN, Stringer K, Türk E. Electronic fingerprinting of the dead. INT J LEGAL MED. 2008;122(1):77-80. 1.

Bibtex

@article{05f5b65bd5d64b05819b9a8aa37a602a,
title = "Electronic fingerprinting of the dead.",
abstract = "To date, a number of methods exist for the capture of fingerprints from cadavers that can then be used in isolation as a primary method for the identification of the dead. We report the use of a handheld, mobile wireless unit used in conjunction with a personal digital assistant (PDA) device for the capture of fingerprints from the dead. We also consider a handheld single-digit fingerprint scanner that utilises a USB laptop connection for the electronic capture of cadaveric fingerprints. Both are single-operator units that, if ridge detail is preserved, can collect a 10-set of finger pad prints in approximately 45 and 90 s, respectively. We present our observations on the restrictions as to when such devices can be used with cadavers. We do, however, illustrate that the images are of sufficient quality to allow positive identification from finger pad prints of the dead. With the development of mobile, handheld, biometric, PDA-based units for the police, we hypothesize that, under certain circumstances, devices such as these could be used for the accelerated acquisition of fingerprint identification data with the potential for rapid near-patient identification in the future.",
author = "Rutty, {G N} and K Stringer and Elisabeth T{\"u}rk",
year = "2008",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "122",
pages = "77--80",
journal = "INT J LEGAL MED",
issn = "0937-9827",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Electronic fingerprinting of the dead.

AU - Rutty, G N

AU - Stringer, K

AU - Türk, Elisabeth

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - To date, a number of methods exist for the capture of fingerprints from cadavers that can then be used in isolation as a primary method for the identification of the dead. We report the use of a handheld, mobile wireless unit used in conjunction with a personal digital assistant (PDA) device for the capture of fingerprints from the dead. We also consider a handheld single-digit fingerprint scanner that utilises a USB laptop connection for the electronic capture of cadaveric fingerprints. Both are single-operator units that, if ridge detail is preserved, can collect a 10-set of finger pad prints in approximately 45 and 90 s, respectively. We present our observations on the restrictions as to when such devices can be used with cadavers. We do, however, illustrate that the images are of sufficient quality to allow positive identification from finger pad prints of the dead. With the development of mobile, handheld, biometric, PDA-based units for the police, we hypothesize that, under certain circumstances, devices such as these could be used for the accelerated acquisition of fingerprint identification data with the potential for rapid near-patient identification in the future.

AB - To date, a number of methods exist for the capture of fingerprints from cadavers that can then be used in isolation as a primary method for the identification of the dead. We report the use of a handheld, mobile wireless unit used in conjunction with a personal digital assistant (PDA) device for the capture of fingerprints from the dead. We also consider a handheld single-digit fingerprint scanner that utilises a USB laptop connection for the electronic capture of cadaveric fingerprints. Both are single-operator units that, if ridge detail is preserved, can collect a 10-set of finger pad prints in approximately 45 and 90 s, respectively. We present our observations on the restrictions as to when such devices can be used with cadavers. We do, however, illustrate that the images are of sufficient quality to allow positive identification from finger pad prints of the dead. With the development of mobile, handheld, biometric, PDA-based units for the police, we hypothesize that, under certain circumstances, devices such as these could be used for the accelerated acquisition of fingerprint identification data with the potential for rapid near-patient identification in the future.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 122

SP - 77

EP - 80

JO - INT J LEGAL MED

JF - INT J LEGAL MED

SN - 0937-9827

IS - 1

M1 - 1

ER -