Repeatability and Reproducibility of Earprint Acquisition*
This study was carried out within the framework of the FearID project, which is a shared-cost RTD project funded under the 5th Framework Programme of the European Community, within the Competitive and Sustainable Growth Programme, Measurement and Testing Activity, Contract G6RD-CT-2001-00618.
Abstract
Abstract: For all forensic disciplines dealing with identification—e.g., of glass, tool marks, fibers, faces, fingers, handwriting, speakers—in which manual (subjective, nonautomated) processes play a role, operator dependencies are relevant. With respect to earprint identification, in the period 2002–2005, the Forensic Ear Identification research project collected a database of 1229 donors, three prints per ear, and laid down a “best practice” for print acquisition. Repeatability and reproducibility aspects of the print acquisition are tested. The study suggests that different operators may acquire prints of differing quality, with equal error rates of the matching system ranging from 9% to 19%. Moreover, it turns out that “matching” earprints are more alike when taken in a consecutive row than when taken on separate occasions. This underlines the importance of (1) studying operator effects, (2) operator training, and (3) not gathering “matching” reference material at the same occasion.