Research and development
A Nationally Representative Examination of the Prevalence, Characteristics, and Consequences of Statutory Rape in the United States
2023 National Institute of Justice Forensic Science Research and Development Symposium
Development of a Probability Model to Predict Head Injury Risk in Pediatric Falls
Investigation of Subadult Dental Age-at-death Estimation using Transition Analysis and Machine Learning Methods
Investigating the Effectiveness of the School Security Climate on Student Connectedness and School Performance
Identifying Cost-Effective Security Barrier Technologies for K-12 Schools: An Interdisciplinary Evaluation
Just Science Podcast: Just Sexual Assault Response in Indigenous Communities
Five Things About Reentry
Infrared microscopy and liquid chromatography applied to problems in forensics and bioanalytical chemistry
The Microbiome Surrounding Death and Decay: Microbial Ecology of Food Processing, Meat Spoilage, and Human Decomposition Environments
DNA Analysis and the Postmortem Submersion Interval from the Microbiome of Waterlogged Skeletal Remains
Software Tool and Methodology for Enhancement of Unidentified Decedent Systems with Postmortem Automatic Iris Recognition
Understanding the Pathology of Homicidal Pediatric Blunt Neurotrauma through Correlation of Advanced Magnetic Resonance Images with Histopathology
A high resolution study of long-term vertebrate decomposition in human and animal model systems
Optimizing Bone Loss Across the Lifespan: The Three-Dimensional Structure of Porosity in the Human Femoral Neck and Rib As a Metric of Bone Fragility
Building More Reliable Forensic Sciences, Part 2
The scientific basis of several aspects of forensic evidence was first called into question by the 2009 National Research Council report. That report had an immediate impact on law enforcement, crime labs, courtrooms, and the broader scientific community.