Fingerprints Comparison Guide
Fingerprints Comparison Guide
Friction Ridges
Friction ridges do not run evenly and unbroken across our fingers, hands, toes and feet.
Rather, they display a number of characteristics known as minutiae. The principle
categories of minutiae are as follows:
Points of Identification
Human skin is elastic, and no two impressions of the same fingerprint will be exactly
identical. Therefore, there is little value in measuring the angle formed by a bifurcation or
the precise distance between two particular minutiae on fingerprints.
Where minutiae on two different fingerprint impressions meet these criteria, they are
referred to as points of similarity. Where minutiae do not meet these criteria, they are
referred to as points of dissimilarity. When sufficient minutiae are located in the same
true relative sequence or unit relationship, then an identification is assumed, and the
points of similarity are referred to as points of identification.
The fingerprint examiner does not make judgements about the likelihood or probability of
a match - there is no such thing as a 50% or 80% match. Factors that may lead to an
inconclusive comparison include latent prints being smudged, not sufficiently complete,
or overlaid one over another. Alternatively, dirt or other materials on the finger at the
time the latent impression was made may result in it being dissimilar.