Emerging Technologies for the Analysis of Forensic Traces



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Springer


Paru le : 2019-09-30



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Cet ouvrage constitue une voie de communication entre le milieu universitaire et les utilisateurs/praticiens afin de faire progresser la criminalistique et d'accroître sa contribution aux enquêtes criminelles et aux affaires judiciaires. En couvrant l'état de l'art des technologies prometteuses pour l'analyse de traces de preuves à l'aide d'un vocabulaire contrôlé, cet ouvrage s'adresse à la communauté médico-légale et, surtout, informe les utilisateurs finaux des possibilités nouvelles et potentielles de la médecine légale pour lutter contre la criminalité.
En présentant les commentaires des utilisateurs finaux à la fin de chaque chapitre, la communauté académique concernée reçoit des indications claires sur les domaines dans lesquels il convient d'orienter les développements technologiques futurs afin de répondre aux exigences légales en matière de déploiement opérationnel, ainsi qu'aux besoins spécifiques des utilisateurs finaux.
Les technologies et les techniques d'analyse prometteuses basées sur la chimie, ainsi que les techniques qui ont déjà montré à des degrés divers un caractère opérationnel, sont abordées. La majorité des techniques couvertes ont des capacités d'imagerie, c'est-à-dire la capacité de visualiser la distribution des molécules cibles dans les traces récupérées. Cette caractéristique améliore l'intelligibilité de l'information, ce qui la rend également accessible à un public non spécialisé, comme c'est généralement le cas avec un jury de la cour. Les preuves à l'état de traces examinées dans cet ouvrage comprennent les traces de doigts, les fluides corporels, les cheveux, les résidus de tir, la terre, l'encre et les documents interrogés, couvrant ainsi un large éventail de preuves possibles récupérées sur les lieux du crime.
Pages
275 pages
Collection
n.c
Parution
2019-09-30
Marque
Springer
EAN papier
9783030205416
EAN PDF
9783030205423

Informations sur l'ebook
Nombre pages copiables
2
Nombre pages imprimables
27
Taille du fichier
10107 Ko
Prix
105,49 €
EAN EPUB
9783030205423

Informations sur l'ebook
Nombre pages copiables
2
Nombre pages imprimables
27
Taille du fichier
61501 Ko
Prix
105,49 €

Simona Francese holds a degree in Chemistry awarded by the University of Salerno (Italy) in 2000 by successfully completing a 5 year programme Upon successful completion of further chemistry exams, she was awarded the “abilitation to undertake the profession of Chemist” by the same University.

She was subsequently awarded a PhD in Chemical Sciences in 2004 by the University of Salerno by successfully completing a 3 year research programme. PhD achieved excellence as ratified by the awarding academic panel. Francese was awarded a short post doctoral fellowship between March 2005 and June 2015 and subsequently held a 3 year research fellowship at the Interdepartmental Centre for Mass Spectrometry, University of Florence, Italy.

She was then employed at Sheffield Hallam University in 2008 as Lecturer in Biomedical Sciences.

At Sheffield Hallam University (SHU), Dr Francese is Reader since 2014 and the deputy Head of the Centre for Mass Spectrometry Imaging since2016 within the Biomolecular Research Centre. At SHU She has pioneered the use and development of MALDI MSI strategies to extract additional intelligence from latent fingermarks starting October 2008. She is part of the International Fingermark Research Group (40 members worldwide on invitation only) and currently the worldwide leader in the application of this technology to ridge impressions, publishing 17 peer reviewed papers to date. 

Together with the group that she leads, she has built unprecedented knowledge on the use of MALDI MS based strategies to derive additional forensic intelligence from the chemical content of a mark; this ranges from specific detection of blood through detection of haemoglobin and haem, determination of the suspect's sex, separation of overlapping marks, to the detection of ingested substances and external contaminants including drugs of abuse making possible the integration with currently employed forensic workflows. She leads multidisciplinary work cross Faculty which led to a prototype being licenced to Consolite Forensics l.t.d.

She is funded by the Home Office UK, Centre for Applied Science and Technology, The Ministry of Defence Science and Technology Laboratory and has received funds by West Yorkshire Police. Her constant efforts towards translational research have led to the deployment of the technology in police casework demonstrating the operational capabilities in providing additional intelligence around a suspect profile. The strong endorsement by the Home Office UK has led to a significant Media interest with interviews on BBC Breakfast, BBC Radio World Service and all the major BBC radios in UK in addition to US and Canadian Radio Interviews.

Her research was selected as one of the four case studies for the Sheffield Hallam University campaign changing lives. This campaign was developed in response to the University being ranked in the top 5 modern Universities for research in the REF2014. The Campaign was entered in the category ‘Best Marketing Initiative to Promote Research Excellence’ and won the Heist Gold award.

The Home Office has integrated MALDI MSI in its Fingermark Visualisation Manual under Category C techniques (potential technologies of the future). It is now the Home Office 's intention, following the use of the technology in casework, to move MALDI MSI up to Category B in the new manual (techniques to be used when those conventionally prescribed fail).

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