English
Noun
- a fingerprint.
A fingerprint is an impression of the friction
ridges of all or any part of the finger. A friction ridge is a
raised portion of the
epidermis
on the palmar (palm and fingers) or plantar (sole and toes) skin,
consisting of one or more connected ridge units of friction ridge
skin. The term fingerprint normally refers to impressions
transferred from the pad on the last joint of fingers and thumbs,
though fingerprint cards also typically record portions of lower
joint areas of the fingers (which are also used to make
identifications).
Fingerprints in other species
Some other animals, including
gorillas,
koalas, and
fishers
have their own unique prints. In fact, koala fingerprints are
remarkably similar to human fingerprints; even with an electron
microscope, it can be quite difficult to distinguish between the
two. Gorillas have fingerprints while chimpanzees don't, even
though the latter are more closely related to humans.
Fingerprints as used for identification
Fingerprint
identification (sometimes referred to as dactyloscopy) or palmprint
identification is the process of comparing questioned and known
friction skin ridge impressions (see
Minutiae) from
fingers or palms to determine if the impressions are from the same
finger or palm. The flexibility of friction ridge skin means that
no two finger or palm prints are ever exactly alike (never
identical in every detail), even two impressions recorded
immediately after each other. Fingerprint identification (also
referred to as individualization) occurs when an expert (or an
expert
computer system operating under
threshold
scoring rules) determines that two friction ridge impressions
originated from the same finger or palm (or toe, sole) to the
exclusion of all others.
A known print is the intentional recording of the
friction ridges, usually with black printer's ink rolled across a
contrasting white background, typically a white card. Friction
ridges can also be recorded digitally using a technique called
Live-Scan. A latent print is the chance reproduction of the
friction ridges deposited on the surface of an item. Latent prints
are often fragmentary and may require chemical methods,
powder,
or alternative light sources in order to be visualized.
When friction ridges come in contact with a
surface that is receptive to a print, material on the ridges, such
as perspiration, oil, grease, ink, etc. can be transferred to the
item. The factors which affect friction ridge impressions are
numerous, thereby requiring examiners to undergo extensive and
objective study in order to be trained to competency. Pliability of
the skin, deposition pressure, slippage, the matrix, the surface,
and the development medium are just some of the various factors
which can cause a latent print to appear differently from the known
recording of the same friction ridges. Indeed, the conditions of
friction ridge deposition are unique and never duplicated. This is
another reason why extensive and objective study is necessary for
examiners to achieve competency.
Fingerprint capture
Livescan devices
Fingerprint image acquisition is
considered the most critical step of an automated fingerprint
authentication system, as it determines the final fingerprint image
quality, which has drastic effects on the overall system
performance. There are different types of fingerprint readers on
the market, but the basic idea behind each capture approach is to
measure in some way the physical difference between ridges and
valleys. All the proposed methods can be grouped in two major
families: solid-state fingerprint readers and optical fingerprint
readers. The procedure for capturing a fingerprint using a sensor
consists of rolling or touching with the finger onto a sensing
area, which according to the physical principle in use (capacitive,
optical, thermal, etc.) captures the difference between valleys and
ridges. When a finger touches or rolls onto a surface, the elastic
skin deforms. The quantity and direction of the pressure applied by
the user, the skin conditions and the projection of an irregular 3D
object (the finger) onto a 2D flat plane introduce distortions,
noise and inconsistencies in the captured fingerprint image. These
problems result in inconsistent, irreproducible and non-uniform
contacts and, during each acquisition, their effects on the same
fingerprint results are different and uncontrollable. The
representation of the same fingerprint changes every time the
finger is placed on the sensor platen, increasing the complexity of
the fingerprint matching, impairing the system performance, and
consequently limiting the widespread use of this biometric
technology.
Print types
Latent prints
Although the word latent means hidden or
invisible, in modern usage for
forensic
science the term latent prints means any chance or accidental
impression left by friction ridge skin on a surface, regardless of
whether it is visible or invisible at the time of deposition.
Electronic, chemical and physical processing techniques permit
visualization of invisible latent print residue whether they are
from natural secretions of the eccrine glands present on friction
ridge skin (which produce palmar
sweat,
sebum, and various kinds of
lipids), or whether the
impression is in a contaminant such as motor oil, blood, paint,
ink, etc.
Latent prints may exhibit only a small portion of
the surface of the finger and may be smudged, distorted, or both,
depending on how they were deposited. For these reasons, latent
prints are an “inevitable source of error in making comparisons,”
as they generally “contain less clarity, less content, and less
undistorted information than a fingerprint taken under controlled
conditions, and much, much less detail compared to the actual
patterns of ridges and grooves of a finger.”
Patent prints
These are friction ridge impressions of
unknown origin which are obvious to the human eye and are caused by
a transfer of foreign material on the finger, onto a surface.
Because they are already visible they need no enhancement, and are
generally photographed instead of being lifted in the same manner
as latent prints. Commonly encountered examples are melted candle
wax, putty removed from the perimeter of window panes and thick
grease deposits on car parts. Such prints are already visible and
need no enhancement, but investigators must not overlook the
potential that invisible latent prints deposited by accomplices may
also be on such surfaces. After photographically recording such
prints, attempts should be made to develop other non-plastic
impressions deposited at natural finger/palm secretions (eccrine
gland secretions) or contaminates.
Classifying fingerprints
Before computerization replaced
manual filing systems in large fingerprint operations, manual
fingerprint classification systems were used to categorize
fingerprints based on general ridge formations (such as the
presence or absence of circular patterns in various fingers), thus
permitting filing and retrieval of paper records in large
collections based on friction ridge patterns independent of name,
birth date and other biographic data that persons may misrepresent.
The most popular ten-print classification systems include the
Roscher system, the Vucetich system, and the
Henry Classification System. Of these systems, the Roscher
system was developed in Germany and implemented in both
Germany and
Japan, the
Vucetich system was developed in
Argentina and
implemented throughout South America, and the Henry system was
developed in
India and implemented
in most English-speaking countries..
In the Henry system of classification, there are
three basic fingerprint patterns: Arch, Loop and Whorl. There are
also more complex classification systems that further break down
patterns to plain arches or tented arches. In 14th century Persia
government officials would use their fingerprint in much the same
way we use signatures today. A list of significant modern dates
documenting the use of fingerprints for positive identification are
as follows:
- 1823:
Jan Evangelista Purkyně, a professor of anatomy at the University
of Breslau, published his thesis discussing 9 fingerprint
patterns, but he did not mention the use of fingerprints to
identify persons.
- 1880:
Dr
Henry Faulds published his first paper on the subject in the
scientific
journal Nature
in 1880.
Returning to the UK in 1886, he offered the
concept to the Metropolitan
Police in London but it was
dismissed.
- 1892: Sir
Francis
Galton published a detailed statistical model of fingerprint
analysis and identification and encouraged its use in forensic
science in his book Finger Prints.
- 1892:
Juan
Vucetich, an Argentine police officer who had been studying
Galton pattern types for a year, made the first criminal
fingerprint identification. He successfully proved Francisca
Rojas guilty of murder after showing that the
bloody fingerprint found at the crime scene
was hers, and could only be hers.
- 1897: The
world's first Fingerprint Bureau opened in Calcutta (Kolkata), India
after the Council of the Governor General approved a committee
report (on 12
June 1897)
that fingerprints should be used for classification of criminal
records. Working in the Calcutta Anthropometric Bureau (before it
became the Fingerprint Bureau) were Azizul Haque
and Hem
Chandra Bose. Haque and Bose were the Indian fingerprint
experts credited with primary development of the fingerprint
classification system eventually named after their supervisor,
Sir
Edward Richard Henry.
- 1901: The
first United Kingdom Fingerprint Bureau was founded in Scotland
Yard. The
Henry Classification System, devised by Sir Edward
Richard Henry with the help of Haque and Bose was
accepted in England and Wales.
- 1902: Dr.
Henry P.
DeForrest used fingerprinting in the New
York Civil Service.
- 1906:
New York City Police Department Deputy Commissioner Joseph A.
Faurot introduced fingerprinting of criminals to the United
States.
Validity of fingerprinting as an identification
method
The validity of forensic fingerprint evidence has
recently been challenged by academics, judges and the media. While
fingerprint identification was an improvement over earlier
anthropometric systems,
the subjective nature of matching, along with the relatively high
error rate of matches when compared to DNA, has made this forensic
practice controversial.
Certain specific criticisms are now being
accepted by some leaders of the forensic fingerprint community,
providing an incentive to improve training and procedures. Glenn
Langenburg who is a Forensic Scientist, Latent Print Examiner for
the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, is such an
individual, having written an article that responds to the most
active academic critics.
Criticism
The words "Reliability" and "Validity" have
specific meanings to the scientific community. Reliability means
successive tests bring the same results. Validity means that the
results accurately reflect the external criteria being
measured.
Although experts are often more comfortable
relying on their instincts, this reliance does not always translate
into superior predictive ability.
For example, in the popular Analysis, Comparison,
Evaluation, and Verification (ACE-V) paradigm for fingerprint
identification, the verification stage, in which a second examiner
confirms the assessment of the original examiner, may increase the
consistency of the assessments. But while the verification stage
has implications for the reliability of latent print comparisons,
it does not assure their validity.(pp 12)
- Established the first professional certification program for
forensic scientists, the IAI's Certified Latent Print Examiner
program (in 1977), issuing certification to those meeting stringent
criteria and revoking certification for serious errors such as
erroneous identifications.
- Remains the most commonly used forensic evidence worldwide—in
most jurisdictions fingerprint examination cases match or outnumber
all other forensic examination casework combined.
- Continues to expand as the premier method for identifying
persons, with tens of thousands of persons added to fingerprint
repositories daily in America alone—far outdistancing similar
databases in growth.
- Is claimed to outperform DNA and all other human identification
systems (fingerprints are said to solve ten times more unknown
suspect cases than DNA in most jurisdictions).
- Fingerprint identification was the first forensic discipline
(in 1977) to formally institute a professional certification
program for individual experts, including a procedure for
decertifying those making errors. Other forensic disciplines later
followed suit in establishing certification programs whereby
certification could be revoked for error. The FBI Latent Print Unit
ran the print collected in Madrid and reported a match against one
of 20 fingerprint candidates returned in a search response from
their IAFIS—Integrated
Automated Fingerprint Identification System. The FBI initially
called the match "100 percent positive" and an "absolutely
incontrovertible match". The Spanish
National Police examiners concluded the prints did not match
Mayfield, and after two weeks identified another man who matched.
The FBI
acknowledged the error, and a judge released Mayfield after two
weeks in May 2004.
Shirley McKie
Error in identification.
Shirley
McKie was a police detective in
1997 when she was
accused of leaving her thumb print inside a house in
Kilmarnock,
Scotland
where Marion Ross had been murdered. Although
detective constable McKie denied
having been inside the house, she was arrested in a dawn raid the
following year and charged with
perjury. The only evidence was
the thumb print allegedly found at the murder scene. Two American
experts testified on her behalf at her trial in May
1999 and she was found
not guilty. The
Scottish Criminal Record Office (SCRO) would not admit any
error, but Scottish first minister
Jack
McConnell later said there had been an "honest mistake".
On
February 7,
2006, McKie
was awarded
£750,000
in compensation from the
Scottish
Executive and the
SCRO.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/4689218.stm
Controversy continues to surround the McKie case with calls for the
resignations of Scottish ministers and for either a public or a
judicial inquiry into the matter.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/4736046.stm
Stephan Cowans
Error in identification. Stephan Cowans (d.
2007-10-25) was convicted of attempted murder in 1997 after he was
accused of the shooting of a
police
officer while fleeing a robbery in
Roxbury,
Massachusetts. He was implicated in the crime by the testimony
of two witnesses, one of whom was the victim. The other evidence
was a fingerprint on a glass mug that the assailant drank water
from, and experts testified that the fingerprint belonged to him.
He was found guilty and sent to prison with a sentence of 35 years.
While in prison he earned money cleaning up biohazards until he
could afford to have the evidence tested for
DNA. The DNA did not
match his, but he had already served six years in prison before he
was released.
Fingerprinting of children
see
Biometrics
in schools Various schools have implemented fingerprint locks
or registered children's fingerprints. This happened in the United
Kingdom (fingerprint lock in the
Holland
Park School in London, databases, etc.), in Belgium (école
Marie-José in
Liège),
in France, in Italy, etc. The NGO
Privacy
International has alerted that tens of thousands of UK school
children were being fingerprinted by schools, often without the
knowledge or consent of their parents. In 2002, the supplier
Micro
Librarian Systems, which use a technology similar to US prisons
and German military, estimated that 350 schools through-out Britain
were using such systems, to replace library cards. Under the
Data
Protection Act (DPA), schools in the UK do not have to ask
parental consent for such practices.
Parents opposed to such
practices may only bring individual complaints against
schools..
The purpose of taking children's fingerprints is
to struggle against school skipping or/and to replace library cards
or money for meals by fingerprint locks. In Belgium, this practice
gave rise to a question in Parliament on February 6, 2007 by
Michel
de La Motte (
Humanist
Democratic Centre) to the Education Minister
Marie Arena,
who replied that they were legal insofar as the school did not use
them for external purposes nor to survey the private life of
children. Such practices have also been used in France (
Angers, Carqueiranne
college in the
Var — the
latter won the
Big
Brother Award of 2005, etc.) although the
CNIL, official
organisation in charge of protection of privacy, has declared them
"disproportionate."
In March 2007, the British government was
considering fingerprinting of children aged 11 to 15 as part of new
passport and
ID card (the
latter having been recently implemented in the UK), also lifting
opposition for privacy concerns. All fingerprints taken would be
cross-checked against prints from 900,000 unsolved crimes. Shadow
Home secretary
David Davis
called the plan "sinister."
Recently, serious concerns about the security
implications of using conventional biometric templates in schools
have been raised by a number of leading IT security experts,
including
Kim
Cameron, architect of identity and access in the connected
systems division at Microsoft, who cites research by Cavoukian and
Stoianov to back up his assertion that "it is absolutely premature
to begin using 'conventional biometrics' in schools".
Biometric vendors claim benefits to schools such
as improved reading skills, decreased wait times in lunch lines and
increased revenues . They do not cite independent research to
support this. Educationalist Dr Sandra Leaton Gray of Homerton
College, Cambridge
stated in
early 2007 that "I have not been able to find a single piece of
published research which suggests that the use of biometrics in
schools promotes healthy eating or improves reading skills amongst
children... There is absolutely no evidence for such claims".
The
Ottawa Police in
Canada advised parents who fear that their children may be
kidnapped to have their fingerprints taken.
U.S. databases and compression
The FBI manages a
fingerprint identification system and database called
IAFIS, which
currently holds the fingerprints and criminal records of over
fifty-one million criminal record subjects, and over 1.5 million
civil (non-criminal) fingerprint records. U.S. Visit currently
holds a repository of over 50 million persons, primarily in the
form of two-finger records (by 2008, U.S. Visit is transforming to
a system recording FBI-standard tenprint records).
Most American law enforcement agencies use
Wavelet Scalar Quantization (WSQ), a
wavelet-based
system for efficient storage of compressed fingerprint images at
500 pixels per inch (ppi). WSQ was developed by the
FBI, the Los Alamos
National Lab, and the
National Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST). For
fingerprints recorded at 1000 ppi
spatial
resolution, law enforcement (including the FBI) uses
JPEG 2000
instead of WSQ.
Locks and other applications
In the
2000s, electronic
fingerprint readers have been introduced for security applications
such as identification of computer users (log-in authentication).
However, early devices have been discovered to be vulnerable to
quite simple methods of deception, such as fake fingerprints cast
in
gels. In 2006,
fingerprint sensors gained popularity in the notebook PC market.
Built-in sensors in
ThinkPads,
VAIO laptops,
and others also double as
motion
detectors for document scrolling, like the
scroll
wheel.
Another recent use of fingerprints in a
day-to-day setting has been the increasing reliance on
biometrics
in schools where fingerprints and, to a lesser extent, iris
scans are used to validate electronic registration, cashless
catering, and library access. This practice is
particularly
widespread in the UK, where more than 3500 schools currently
use such technology, though it is also starting to be adopted in
some states in the US.
Footprints
Friction ridge skin present on the soles of the
feet and toes (plantar surfaces) is as unique as ridge detail on
the fingers and palms (palmar surfaces). When recovered at crime
scenes or on items of evidence, sole and toe impressions are used
in the same manner as finger and palm prints to effect
identifications. Footprint (toe and sole friction ridge skin)
evidence has been admitted in U.S. courts since 1934 (People v.
Les, 267 Michigan 648, 255 NW 407).
Footprints of infants, along with thumb or index
finger prints of mothers, are still commonly recorded in hospitals
to assist in verifying the identity of infants. Often, the only
identifiable ridge detail in such impressions is from the large toe
or adjacent to the large toe, due to the difficulty of recording
such fine detail. When legible ridge detail is lacking, DNA is
normally effective (except in instances of
chimaerism) for indirectly
identifying infants by confirming maternity and paternity of an
infant's parents.
It is not uncommon for military records of flight
personnel to include bare foot inked impressions. Friction ridge
skin protected inside flight boots tends to survive the trauma of a
plane crash (and accompanying fire) better than fingers. Even
though the U.S. Armed Forces DNA Identification Laboratory (AFDIL)
stores refrigerated DNA samples from all current active duty and
reserve personnel, almost all casualty identifications are effected
using fingerprints from military ID card records (live scan
fingerprints are recorded at the time such cards are issued). When
friction ridge skin is not available from deceased military
personnel, DNA and
dental
records are used to confirm identity.
Lifestyle information
The secretions, skin oils and dead cells in the
fingerprint contain residues of various chemicals and their
metabolites present
in the body. These can be detected and used for forensic purposes.
For example the fingerprints of
tobacco
smokers contain traces of
cotinine, a
nicotine metabolite; they also
contain traces of nicotine itself; however that may be ambiguous as
its presence may be caused by mere contact of the finger with a
tobacco product. By treating the fingerprint with gold
nanoparticles with attached
cotinine
antibodies,
and then subsequently with fluorescent agent attached to cotinine
antibody antibodies, a fingerprint of a smoker becomes fluorescent;
non-smoker's fingerprint stays dark. The same approach is
investigated to be used for identifying heavy
coffee drinkers,
cannabis
smokers, and users of various other drugs.
http://www.newscientisttech.com/article.ns?id=dn11887http://www.newscientisttech.com/article/dn8938
References
External links
Books, Articles, & Journals
Commercial Sites & Societies
dactylogram in Arabic: بصمة الأصبع
dactylogram in Asturian: Buelga dactilar
dactylogram in Catalan: Reconeixement
d'empremtes dactilars
dactylogram in Czech: Daktyloskopie
dactylogram in Danish: Fingeraftryk
dactylogram in German: Fingerabdruck
dactylogram in Spanish: Huella dactilar
dactylogram in French: Empreinte digitale
dactylogram in Galician: Pegada dactilar
dactylogram in Korean: 지문
dactylogram in Croatian: Daktiloskopija
dactylogram in Indonesian: Sidik jari
dactylogram in Italian: Impronta digitale
dactylogram in Hebrew: טביעת אצבע
dactylogram in Malayalam: വിരലടയാളം
dactylogram in Malay (macrolanguage): Cap
jari
dactylogram in Dutch: Dactyloscopie
dactylogram in Japanese: 指紋
dactylogram in Norwegian: Fingeravtrykk
dactylogram in Portuguese: Impressão digital
(anatomia)
dactylogram in Russian: Дактилоскопия
dactylogram in Slovak: Daktyloskopia
dactylogram in Slovenian: Prstni odtis
dactylogram in Serbian: Отисак прста
dactylogram in Serbo-Croatian:
Daktiloskopija
dactylogram in Finnish: Sormenjälki
dactylogram in Swedish: Fingeravtryck
dactylogram in Turkish: Parmak izi
dactylogram in Ukrainian: Дактилоскопія
dactylogram in Chinese: 指紋