The forensic comparison of glass aims to compare a glass sample of an unknown source with a control glass sample of a known source. In this work, we use multi-elemental features from Laser Ablation Inductively Coupled Plasma with Mass Spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) to compute a likelihood ratio. This calculation is a complex procedure that generally requires a probabilistic model including the within-source and betweensource variabilities of the features. Assuming the within-source variability to be normally distributed is a practical premise with the available data. However, the between-source variability is generally assumed to follow a much more complex distribution, typically described with a kernel density function. In this work, inste...
Broken glass is a trace material frequently found at crime scenes such as hit-and-runs, burglaries, ...
Forensic analysis of glass samples was performed in different laboratories within the NITE-CRIME (Na...
The question of whether two sets of measurements which constitute evidence come from the same source...
[EN] The computation of likelihood ratios (LR) to measure the weight of forensic glass evidence with...
The evaluation of glass evidence in forensic science is an important issue. Traditionally, this has ...
Glass is one of the most common types of trace evidence found at crime scenes and on suspects. Refra...
Glass samples of four types commonly encountered in forensic examinations have been analyzed by lase...
The necessity of elemental analysis techniques to solve forensic problems continues to expand as the...
The necessity of elemental analysis techniques to solve forensic problems continues to expand as the...
The most discriminating method that is currently applied in routine forensic elemental analysis of g...
One of the problems of analysis of forensic evidence such as glass fragments, is the determination o...
Glass fragments found in crime scenes may constitute important forensic evidence when properly analy...
Glass samples Of four types commonly encountered in forensic examinations have been analyzed by lase...
This is the author’s version of a work that was accepted for publication in Chemometrics and Intelli...
This work evaluated the capabilities of inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) for el...
Broken glass is a trace material frequently found at crime scenes such as hit-and-runs, burglaries, ...
Forensic analysis of glass samples was performed in different laboratories within the NITE-CRIME (Na...
The question of whether two sets of measurements which constitute evidence come from the same source...
[EN] The computation of likelihood ratios (LR) to measure the weight of forensic glass evidence with...
The evaluation of glass evidence in forensic science is an important issue. Traditionally, this has ...
Glass is one of the most common types of trace evidence found at crime scenes and on suspects. Refra...
Glass samples of four types commonly encountered in forensic examinations have been analyzed by lase...
The necessity of elemental analysis techniques to solve forensic problems continues to expand as the...
The necessity of elemental analysis techniques to solve forensic problems continues to expand as the...
The most discriminating method that is currently applied in routine forensic elemental analysis of g...
One of the problems of analysis of forensic evidence such as glass fragments, is the determination o...
Glass fragments found in crime scenes may constitute important forensic evidence when properly analy...
Glass samples Of four types commonly encountered in forensic examinations have been analyzed by lase...
This is the author’s version of a work that was accepted for publication in Chemometrics and Intelli...
This work evaluated the capabilities of inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) for el...
Broken glass is a trace material frequently found at crime scenes such as hit-and-runs, burglaries, ...
Forensic analysis of glass samples was performed in different laboratories within the NITE-CRIME (Na...
The question of whether two sets of measurements which constitute evidence come from the same source...