Victim identification
Rapid DNA’s Role in Disaster Victim Identification
The Department of Homeland Security Science and Technology Directorate has tested Rapid DNA at mass fatality incident response exercises since 2015. This was done to determine the technology’s ability and usefulness in identifying victims of mass disasters. This webinar will review the successes and challenges from those exercises as well as discuss Rapid DNA’s most recent role in identifying victims of the 2018 Camp Fire in Butte County, CA.
This webinar was presented by the NIJ Forensic Technology Center of Excellence on May 2, 2019.
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Exploring the Relationship Between Dental Development, Population Variation, and Environment
Six NSCL/P Loci Show Associations With Normal-Range Craniofacial Variation
Genome-wide Mapping of Global-to-Local Genetic Effects on Human Facial Shape
Testing Reliability of the Computational Age-At-Death Estimation Methods between Five Observers Using Three-Dimensional Image Data of the Pubic Symphysis
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Application of the Optimized Summed Scored Attributes Method to Sex Estimation in Asian Crania
Facial Recognition From DNA Using Face-to-DNA Classifiers
Sex estimation in Filipino crania using metric and nonmetric methods
Genetics and Genomics of Core Short Tandem Repeat Loci Used in Human Identity Testing
The Texas Landscape: Accounting for Migrant Mortality and the Challenges of a Justice of the Peace Medicolegal System
Data Base for Forensic Anthropology
The Collection, Preservation, and Processing of DNA Samples from Decomposing Human Remains for More Direct Disaster Victim Identification (DVI)
Overview of Forensic Anthropology
Forensic anthropologists examine skeletal human remains to assess age at death, sex, stature, and ancestry; identify injuries; and estimate the time since death to provide investigators with information that can assist in identifying a decedent.
Forensic odontologists examine the development, anatomy, and any restorative dental corrections of the teeth, such as fillings or extractions, to make a comparative identification of a person.
Bones and teeth are...
Improving the Identification of and Responses to Victims of Elder Mistreatment
MDI Myth: Next-Of-Kin Aren't That Hard to Find