JS 111 Forensic Biometrics I.Welcome and Introductions a. In the news- Military Applications- 1 billion for NGI! b. Instructors Dr. Steven Lee, Dr. Jim.

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JS 111 Forensic Biometrics I.Welcome and Introductions a. In the news- Military Applications- 1 billion for NGI! b. Instructors Dr. Steven Lee, Dr. Jim Wayman-Biometrics Expert at SJSU!, Mary Juno, Dr.Lorna Pierce- c. Small Group formation- Your background, interests II.Overview of the course Description- Requirements III. Introduction to Forensic Biometrics- Dr. James Wayman

Biometrics in the News

Dr. Jim Wayman

My Background Who am I? Scientist, Teacher and Dad – Consultant -Director of R&D, Biotech (MiraiBio) – Adjunct Prof Chem FIU, Adjunct Prof Biology SFSU – Blessed to have been a mentor to my students – Husband and Dad to 4 – Interests: music, running, meditation How did I get here? Research and Teaching Experience – CA DOJ DNA (94-99), Adjunct SFSU (96- ), Biol UNC (92-94) – SUNYB, AECOM, NYU, Columbia, UCB, UGA – Courses: Mol Genetics, Genetics of Forensic DNA typing (UC Davis), Chem. of DNA type (Web- FIU- F 2001, Sp 2003) Forensic Experience? All in DNA – CA DOJ DNA Research, Validation and Training – Served on TWGDAM – AFDIL mtDNA QA, ASCLD-LAB certified, AAFS full member, CAC full member – Qualified expert DNA witness

Contact Information Instructor: Dr. Steven Lee, Associate Professor OfficeMH 508 Office Hrs:W ( hour M ) Set 15 minute appointments via Phone

Small group formation 6-7 per team (4 teams total) - Designate one team leader Gather s and phone numbers Find out the following. Total of 4 teams 1) Name, Year (class), Major 2) Why are you interested in this course? 3) Something to remember you by- Hobbies, Favorite food, favorite sport, other?

Course Description A survey of scientific and biometric tools and applications used to establish human identity. Topics include identification of missing persons; casualties of mass disasters; victims of war crimes; and the ethical, legal and social implications of biometric technology.

Course goals and SLOs LO1 Describe the basic scientific and biometric tools and applications used to establish human identity. Students will be able to describe the basic concepts of pattern recognition, the context, application and significance in human identification and demonstrate an understanding of the probability and statistical calculations used in these methods. LO2 Explain the tools of modern molecular biology and their applications in identification of criminals, human remains/missing persons and paternity. LO3 Apply knowledge of biometric patterns, impressions and imaging in analytical activities including fingerprints, bones, and facial reconstruction and demonstrate analytical problem solving skills using the scientific method in oral and written reports. LO4 Describe the concepts of ethical, legal and social issues in the application of forensic biometrics to human identification and recognition.

Textbooks Thompson, T. and Black, S. (2007). Forensic human identification: An introduction. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press. ISBN T-2007-Forensic-Human-Identification-an- Introduction T-2007-Forensic-Human-Identification-an- Introduction And Butler, J. (2010). Fundamentals of forensic DNA typing. Burlington, MA: Academic Press. ISBN

Additional Reading Readings and assignments will be scheduled from the following books and citations. Barnes, J. D. Fingerprint source book. Bass, W. M. (2005). Human osteology; A laboratory and field manual, 5th edition. Columbia, MO: Missouri Archaeological Society. Campbell, J., Shen, W., Schwartz, R., Bonastre, J.F., & Matrouf, D. (2009). Forensic speaker recognition: A need for caution. IEEE Signal Processing Magazine, 26(2), Geller, B., Almog, J., Margot, P. & Springer, E. (1999). A chronological review of fingerprint forgery. Journal of Forensic Sciences, 44(5), 963–968. Martin, R. & Barresi, J. (2003). Personal identity. Hoboken, NJ: Blackwell-Wiley. Mnookin, J., Cole, S., Dror, I., Fisher, B., Houck, M., Inman, K., … Stoney, D. (2011), The need for a research culture in the forensic sciences. UCLA Law Review, 725. pulse.law.ucla.edu/.../mnookin-et-al-pulse-uclaw-need-for-research-culture pdf **Stigler, S. M. (2000). The problematic unity of biometrics. Biometrics, 56, The Anatomical Chart web site. **National Research Council. (2009). Strengthening forensic science in the United States: A path forward. (Publication No: ) Washington, DC: National Academies Press. In addition, journal articles, newspapers, other resources including websites will be assigned.

Grading Quizzes50 points (10%) Exam 150 points (10%) Exam 250 points (10%) Final150 points (30%) Research and powerpoint 75 points (15%) – Laboratory Exercises100 Points (20 %) –Notebook 25 points (5%) Total required500 points A total of 10 points may be granted for small group assignments and other individual assignments during the semester. Each assignment will be worth 1-2 points each. These extra credit points may be used to augment your final point total.

Grading Policies Make-up exams will not generally be permitted. However, under extraordinary circumstances, with proper documentation and approval by the instructor, a 15 page single-spaced term paper of an instructor assigned topic, may substitute for 1 exam. A to 500C to A467 to 483.4C367 to A-450 to 466.9F B to B417 to B-400 to 416.9

Academic Integrity and Plagiarism Students should know that the University’s Academic Integrity Policy is availabe at _Policy_S07-2.pdf. Your own commitment to learning, as evidenced by your enrollment at San Jose State University and the University’s integrity policy, require you to be honest in all your academic course work. Faculty members are required to report all infractions to the office of Student Conduct and Ethical Development. The website for Student Conduct and Ethical Development is available at Integrity Policy is availabe at _Policy_S07-2.pdf Student Conduct and Ethical Development is available at Instances of academic dishonesty will not be tolerated. Cheating on exams or plagiarism (presenting the work of another as your own, or the use of another person’s ideas without giving proper credit) will result in a failing grade and sanctions by the University. For this class, all assignments are to be completed by the individual student unless otherwise specified. If you would like to include in your assignment any material you have submitted, or plan to submit for another class, please note that SJSU’s Academic Policy F06-1 requires approval of instructors.

JS 111 Forensic Biometrics, Fall 2011 Course Schedule

Office Hours Policies Set up 15 minute appointments by Weds in person- eoffice hours mon Benefits (to you and me) –Review the course material. –Show me how hard you are working –Provide feedback –Ask specific questions or Ask for help –Extra credit may be provided for coming to discuss questions on the reading, exams, DNA, assignments, forensics, news articles, department, college and campus scholarships…etc

Assignment 1 For each person, find one article from a peer reviewed journal on any biometric tool (see greensheet topics) used in a forensic science application Bring to class on 31 august a copy of the article to Lee along with a 3 paragraph summary In your summary, provide one picture from the article Due Weds 31 Aug -class Be prepared to discuss your article and picture

Assignment 1 continued Read Stigler, S. M. (2000). The problematic unity of biometrics. Biometrics, 56, Published by: International Biometric Society Article Stable URL: Biometric Society and Biometric Introduction- AND THE executive SUMMARY OF THE National Research Council. (2009). Strengthening forensic science in the United States: A path forward. (Publication No: ) Washington, DC: National Academies Press. Write a 3 paragraph summary with one question and your answer (critical thinking question) on ONE of the papers. Bring your summaries and questions in hard copy to class 31 August. Read Chapter 1 in Thompson and Black (see on line text) STUDY FOR THE QUIZ!

Biometrics Resources Biometrics.gov Introduction to Biometrics Biometrics glossary Biometrics Consortium Introduction to Biometrics= NYTimes Article on Military Facial ID Biometrics NIST Biometrics Resource Center FBI Next Generation Identification Center for Identification Technology Research West Virginia University- Forensic and Biometric Gateway Dr. Wayman Presentation on Biometrics Forensic vs Biometrics presentation Houck et al

Dr. James Wayman Lecture on Introduction to Biometrics