TY - GEN
T1 - Fundamental statistics of relatively permanent pigmented or vascular skin marks for criminal and victim identification
AU - Nurhudatiana, Arfika
AU - Kong, Adams Wai Kin
AU - Matinpour, Keyan
AU - Cho, Siu Yeung
AU - Craft, Noah
N1 - Copyright:
Copyright 2012 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - Recent technological advances have allowed for a proliferation of digital images that may be involved in crimes. Using these images as evidence in legal cases like child pornography and masked gunmen can be challenging because usually the faces of the suspects are not visible. To perform personal identification in these images, we propose a biometric trait composed of a group of skin marks including, but not limited to, nevi, lentigines, cherry hemangiomas, and seborrheic keratoses. Due to their biological characteristics, we have grouped these as Relatively Permanent Pigmented or Vascular Skin Marks, abbreviated as RPPVSM. As statistical study of RPPVSM is essential before investigating their discriminative power, we present in this paper the fundamental statistics of RPPVSM. Back torso images were collected from 144 Caucasian, Asian, and Latino males, and a researcher trained in dermatology manually identified their RPPVSMs. The statistical results show that Caucasians tend to have more RPPVSMs than Asians and Latinos, and over 80 percent of middle to low density RPPVSM patterns are independently and uniformly distributed.
AB - Recent technological advances have allowed for a proliferation of digital images that may be involved in crimes. Using these images as evidence in legal cases like child pornography and masked gunmen can be challenging because usually the faces of the suspects are not visible. To perform personal identification in these images, we propose a biometric trait composed of a group of skin marks including, but not limited to, nevi, lentigines, cherry hemangiomas, and seborrheic keratoses. Due to their biological characteristics, we have grouped these as Relatively Permanent Pigmented or Vascular Skin Marks, abbreviated as RPPVSM. As statistical study of RPPVSM is essential before investigating their discriminative power, we present in this paper the fundamental statistics of RPPVSM. Back torso images were collected from 144 Caucasian, Asian, and Latino males, and a researcher trained in dermatology manually identified their RPPVSMs. The statistical results show that Caucasians tend to have more RPPVSMs than Asians and Latinos, and over 80 percent of middle to low density RPPVSM patterns are independently and uniformly distributed.
KW - forensics
KW - personal identification
KW - skin marks
KW - spatial point pattern distribution
KW - statistics
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84856092614&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/IJCB.2011.6117496
DO - 10.1109/IJCB.2011.6117496
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:84856092614
SN - 9781457713583
T3 - 2011 International Joint Conference on Biometrics, IJCB 2011
BT - 2011 International Joint Conference on Biometrics, IJCB 2011
T2 - 2011 International Joint Conference on Biometrics, IJCB 2011
Y2 - 11 October 2011 through 13 October 2011
ER -