NCJ Number
250732
Journal
Journal of Forensic Sciences Volume: 62 Issue: 3 Dated: May 2017 Pages: 612-618
Date Published
May 2017
Length
7 pages
Annotation
This study involved an analysis of striated toolmarks made as a function of varying vertical and horizontal angles of attack.
Abstract
Numerous studies have focused on determining whether objective statistical methods can be used to discriminate between known matches and nonmatches when comparing laboratory prepared toolmarks. In the current study, comparisons based on experimental data show that replicate toolmarks from the same tool show high correlation values at identical vertical and horizontal angles, with the correlation decreasing as the angular difference increases, especially for horizontal angular changes. Comparisons between non-matching samples produce low correlation values that remain unchanged as horizontal angular differences increase. Although complete statistical separation was not achieved between matching and non-matching samples, there is evidence that toolmarks can be identified if the variation in horizontal angle is within 10 degrees. The experiment shows that computer-aided comparison techniques could be viable for identification with the proper statistical algorithm. (Publisher abstract modified)
Date Published: May 1, 2017
Downloads
Similar Publications
- IS2aR, a Computational Tool to Transform Voxelized Reference Phantoms into Patient-specific Whole-body Virtual CTs for Peripheral Dose Estimation
- Trauma Behind the Keyboard: Exploring Disparities in Child Sexual Abuse Material Exposure and Mental Health Factors among Police Investigators and Forensic Examiners – A Network Analysis
- “We Need to Not Fear You”: Essential Factors Identified by Sworn Officers and Civilian Staff for Implementation and Expansion of a Co-Response Program