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forensic science |
Also found in: Legal, Wikipedia | 0.04 sec. |
forensic scienceUse of scientific techniques to solve criminal cases. A multidisciplinary field embracing chemistry, physics, botany, zoology, and medicine, forensic science includes the identification of human bodies or traces. Ballistics (the study of projectiles, such as bullets), another traditional forensic field, makes use of such tools as the comparison microscope and the electron microscope. Traditional methods such as fingerprinting are still used, assisted by computers; in addition, blood analysis, forensic dentistry, voice and speech spectrograms, and genetic fingerprinting are increasingly applied. Chemicals, such as poisons and drugs, are analysed by chromatography. ESDA (electrostatic document analysis) is a technique used for revealing indentations on paper, which helps determine if documents have been tampered with. Forensic entomology is also a branch of forensic science.
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Coroners and forensic scientists often have a pro-police bias, thinking of themselves as a part of the prosecution team. The plan also would put 15 additional forensic scientists, technicians and other staffers in the state crime labs. The new journal will be targeted to attorneys, behavioral and forensic scientists, mental health professionals, law enforcement officers, administrators and related social scientists and is being designed as an outlet for scholarly research and related literature on criminal profiling as part of the forensic sciences. |
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