Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

Fingerprints Remain Stable Over Time, Indian-Origin Professor Finds

IANS, 30 Jun, 2015 10:34 AM
    In what could put an end to controversies surrounding admissibility of fingerprint evidence in courts of law, a study by an Indian-origin researcher has found that fingerprint pattern remains stable over time.
     
    "We wanted to answer the question that has plagued law enforcement and forensic science for decades: Is fingerprint pattern persistent over time?" said Anil Jain, professor at the Michigan State University.
     
    "With multilevel statistical modelling, fingerprint recognition accuracy remains stable over time," Jain, an alumnus of Indian Institute of Technology, (Kanpur) said.
     
    Fingerprints have been used by law enforcement and forensics experts to successfully identify people for more than 100 years.
     
    Though fingerprints are assumed to be infallible personal identifiers, there has been little scientific research to prove this claim to be true. As such, there have been repeated challenges to the admissibility of fingerprint evidence in courts of law.
     
    The researchers used fingerprint records of 15,597 subjects apprehended multiple times by the Michigan State Police over a time span varying from five to 12 years.
     
    The results said fingerprint recognition accuracy does not change even as the time between two fingerprints being compared increases.
     
    Experts agree that Jain's research addresses one of the most fundamental issues in fingerprint identification and is of great importance to law enforcement and forensic science.
     
    "This study is one of the fundamental pieces of research on a topic that has always been taken for granted. The permanence of fingerprints has not been systematically studied since the seminal work of Herschel was presented in Galton's book: Finger Prints (1892, Macmillian & Co.)," professor Christophe Champod from Universite de Lausanne, Switzerland, said.
     
    "This study is a monumental achievement and one that will benefit forensic science teams worldwide," Captain Greg Michaud, director of the Forensic Science Division, Michigan State Police, said.
     
    The research was published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Stephen Harper Lands In Kyiv Amid Tension As Ukraine Pushes Canada To Push G7

    Stephen Harper Lands In Kyiv Amid Tension As Ukraine Pushes Canada To Push G7
    KYIV, Ukraine — Stephen Harper arrived in Kyiv early Saturday as Ukraine's envoy urged the prime minister to push his fellow G7 leaders into a strong political stand against the latest Russian aggression.

    Stephen Harper Lands In Kyiv Amid Tension As Ukraine Pushes Canada To Push G7

    Food Safety Agency Working With Game Farmers To Develop Rules Against Disease

    Food Safety Agency Working With Game Farmers To Develop Rules Against Disease
    EDMONTON — Canada's food safety watchdog says it is developing rules with people who raise elk and deer on commercial farms to guard against animal diseases.

    Food Safety Agency Working With Game Farmers To Develop Rules Against Disease

    Tim Hortons Controversy Shows The Pros, Cons Of Brand Association: Experts

    TORONTO — Tim Hortons is getting a crash course in brand association as the company tries to extinguish the fracas over its decision to pull ads for pipeline giant Enbridge.

    Tim Hortons Controversy Shows The Pros, Cons Of Brand Association: Experts

    Lying G20 Officer Who Choked, Arrested Compliant Man Demoted To Constable

    Lying G20 Officer Who Choked, Arrested Compliant Man Demoted To Constable
    TORONTO — A police sergeant who choked a compliant man he arrested illegally at the G20 summit five years ago and then lied about it was handed a two-month demotion to constable Friday.

    Lying G20 Officer Who Choked, Arrested Compliant Man Demoted To Constable

    Justin Levasseur Charged With Second-Degree Murder Of 79-Year-Old Charan Dhandwar In New Westminster

    Justin Levasseur Charged With Second-Degree Murder Of 79-Year-Old Charan Dhandwar In New Westminster
    A 23-year-old man has been charged with second-degree murder in the attack of an elderly woman while she was out for a walk in New Westminster, B.C.

    Justin Levasseur Charged With Second-Degree Murder Of 79-Year-Old Charan Dhandwar In New Westminster

    Police Call For Witnesses To Sea-to-Sky Highway Crash That Killed Cyclists, Passenger

    Police Call For Witnesses To Sea-to-Sky Highway Crash That Killed Cyclists, Passenger
    RCMP are appealing to the occupants of a dark or black SUV who may have witnessed an erratic driver on the Sea-to-Sky Highway near Lillooet, B.C., before three people were killed in a crash.

    Police Call For Witnesses To Sea-to-Sky Highway Crash That Killed Cyclists, Passenger