Artigo Revisado por pares

How fingerprints came into use for personal identification

1990; Elsevier BV; Volume: 23; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/0190-9622(90)70194-m

ISSN

1097-6787

Autores

Richard M. Caplan,

Tópico(s)

Names, Identity, and Discrimination Research

Resumo

The use of fingerprints for personal identification became widespread early in this century. How the fingerprints slowly became standardized involves many persons, including Nathaniel Grew, Johannes Purkinje, William Herschel, Henry Faulds, Charles Darwin, Francis Galton, Mark Twain, Juan Vucetich, Edward Henry, and J. Edgar Hoover. Although fingerprints have been noted and used since antiquity, a 25-year burst of activity that secured adoption of their use for identification began in about 1880. New modifications and applications have continued to the present. The history of fingerprints offers an excellent example of how society adopts innovations. This story also includes a bitter struggle for appropriate credit for various crucial steps in developing and adopting this important tool. More recent technical advances, including computers and molecular biology, now supplementthe ease and usefulness of fingerprints, although the word fingerprinting continues in use by metaphoric extension.

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