Seminal stain fluorescence using three alternate light source-barrier filter combinations on six different colors of cotton fabrics

Detecting and locating semen stains is crucial when creating a linkage between the offender and items of evidence. Currently, the two most common methods of semen stain detection used in crime scenes and items recovered from crime scenes are fluorescence and chemical examinations. An alternate lig...

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Main Author: Su, Joey Young
Language:en_US
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/16197
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spelling ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-161972019-01-08T15:37:56Z Seminal stain fluorescence using three alternate light source-barrier filter combinations on six different colors of cotton fabrics Su, Joey Young Criminology Detecting and locating semen stains is crucial when creating a linkage between the offender and items of evidence. Currently, the two most common methods of semen stain detection used in crime scenes and items recovered from crime scenes are fluorescence and chemical examinations. An alternate light source (ALS), which causes semen to fluoresce under different wavelengths, is an established technique that utilizes converted light for the detection of latent stains. The other method relies on chemically identifying the presence of acid phosphatase activity in semen. Previous studies have concluded that semen optimally fluoresces at 450 nm wavelength with an orange barrier filter. In this paper, the fluorescence of seminal stains under different laboratory conditions is compared in order to investigate the significant factors that may affect semen detection. The variables investigated in this paper include six colors of plain cotton fabrics, three excitation spectra, three semen donors, five semen concentrations and six fabric textures. The intensity of the fluorescence was calculated using the image processing program ImageJ. ImageJ contains a color channel split function that allows photographs to split into 8-bit grayscale images containing the red, green and blue components of the original photographs. Each color channel was individually compared to each other and to the original RGB photographs to determine whether color channel splitting has an effect on the detectability of seminal stain fluorescence. This study suggests that the most significant factor that affects the detectability of a semen stain, aside from the concentration of the stain, is the color of the substrate. The texture of the substrate had no significant effect on the fluorescence and no significant variation in the semen stain fluorescence was observed from the three donors tested; however, future studies are necessary to confirm these findings. Forensic analysts should consider the background color when selecting the excitation light wavelength, and may need to utilize an alternate approach such as a chemical mapping examination, particularly for locating diluted semen stains on a dark background. 2016-05-05T14:49:24Z 2016-05-05T14:49:24Z 2015 2016-04-08T20:17:34Z Thesis/Dissertation https://hdl.handle.net/2144/16197 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Criminology
spellingShingle Criminology
Su, Joey Young
Seminal stain fluorescence using three alternate light source-barrier filter combinations on six different colors of cotton fabrics
description Detecting and locating semen stains is crucial when creating a linkage between the offender and items of evidence. Currently, the two most common methods of semen stain detection used in crime scenes and items recovered from crime scenes are fluorescence and chemical examinations. An alternate light source (ALS), which causes semen to fluoresce under different wavelengths, is an established technique that utilizes converted light for the detection of latent stains. The other method relies on chemically identifying the presence of acid phosphatase activity in semen. Previous studies have concluded that semen optimally fluoresces at 450 nm wavelength with an orange barrier filter. In this paper, the fluorescence of seminal stains under different laboratory conditions is compared in order to investigate the significant factors that may affect semen detection. The variables investigated in this paper include six colors of plain cotton fabrics, three excitation spectra, three semen donors, five semen concentrations and six fabric textures. The intensity of the fluorescence was calculated using the image processing program ImageJ. ImageJ contains a color channel split function that allows photographs to split into 8-bit grayscale images containing the red, green and blue components of the original photographs. Each color channel was individually compared to each other and to the original RGB photographs to determine whether color channel splitting has an effect on the detectability of seminal stain fluorescence. This study suggests that the most significant factor that affects the detectability of a semen stain, aside from the concentration of the stain, is the color of the substrate. The texture of the substrate had no significant effect on the fluorescence and no significant variation in the semen stain fluorescence was observed from the three donors tested; however, future studies are necessary to confirm these findings. Forensic analysts should consider the background color when selecting the excitation light wavelength, and may need to utilize an alternate approach such as a chemical mapping examination, particularly for locating diluted semen stains on a dark background.
author Su, Joey Young
author_facet Su, Joey Young
author_sort Su, Joey Young
title Seminal stain fluorescence using three alternate light source-barrier filter combinations on six different colors of cotton fabrics
title_short Seminal stain fluorescence using three alternate light source-barrier filter combinations on six different colors of cotton fabrics
title_full Seminal stain fluorescence using three alternate light source-barrier filter combinations on six different colors of cotton fabrics
title_fullStr Seminal stain fluorescence using three alternate light source-barrier filter combinations on six different colors of cotton fabrics
title_full_unstemmed Seminal stain fluorescence using three alternate light source-barrier filter combinations on six different colors of cotton fabrics
title_sort seminal stain fluorescence using three alternate light source-barrier filter combinations on six different colors of cotton fabrics
publishDate 2016
url https://hdl.handle.net/2144/16197
work_keys_str_mv AT sujoeyyoung seminalstainfluorescenceusingthreealternatelightsourcebarrierfiltercombinationsonsixdifferentcolorsofcottonfabrics
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