Personal Identification (personal + identification)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Personal Identification Using the Frontal Sinus,

JOURNAL OF FORENSIC SCIENCES, Issue 3 2010
Joanna L. Besana M.Sc.
Abstract:, The frontal sinuses are known to be unique to each individual; however, no one has tested the independence of the frontal sinus traits to see if probability analysis through trait combination is a viable method of identifying an individual using the frontal sinuses. This research examines the feasibility of probability trait combination, based on criteria recommended in the literature, and examines two other methods of identification using the frontal sinuses: discrete trait combinations and superimposition pattern matching. This research finds that most sinus traits are dependent upon one another and thus cannot be used in probability combinations. When looking at traits that are independent, this research finds that metric methods are too fraught with potential errors to be useful. Discrete trait combinations do not have a high enough discriminating power to be useful. Only superimposition pattern matching is an effective method of identifying an individual using the frontal sinuses. [source]


Personal identification (PIN) numbers: a new cause of financial exclusion in older people

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GERIATRIC PSYCHIATRY, Issue 5 2007
Elizabeth L. Sampson
No abstract is available for this article. [source]


Application of short tandem repeat of genomic DNA and mitochondrial DNA for identification of mixed-up tissue specimens

PATHOLOGY INTERNATIONAL, Issue 1 2000
Kenji Sano
Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) typing methods, short tandem repeat of genomic DNA and mitochondrial DNA with the use of polymerase chain reaction amplification, were applied to formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues submitted for diagnosis, to identify and sort out mixed-up tissue specimens. These techniques were found to be reliable, reproducible and specific for personal identification, and thus to eliminate the need for further examinations and to prevent unnecessary surgery. [source]


Endodontic imaging as an aid to forensic personal identification

AUSTRALIAN ENDODONTIC JOURNAL, Issue 2 2010
Alexander Stewart Forrest MDSc, FICD
Abstract Identification by dental comparison between records of a missing person and the dentition of a deceased individual depends on recognition of concordant features common to both with no unexplained discrepancies. While written dental records are commonly used for this task, we believe they should not be the preferred basis of comparison because they do not derive directly from an individual and are potentially prone to errors, inaccuracies and misinterpretation. Images, however, are a direct representation of a physical item, and are an objective method of recording information. Radiographs are images that capture the unique morphological features of teeth, surrounding structures and physical detail of past dental treatment resulting in changes to a dentition. Taking post-mortem radiographs in such a way as to duplicate as closely as possible the conditions under which the ante-mortem radiographs were produced, permits demonstrably rigorous methods of comparison, raising the probative value of the outcome. In this context post-treatment endodontic radiographs present a particularly rich source of features on which individuation can be achieved, especially considering that alteration of endodontic restorations happens less frequently than is the case with intra-coronal restorations. We illustrate various techniques with a series of cases and discuss the parameters for success. [source]