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Course focused on introduction to forensic databases, with emphasis on chemistry, biochemistry and materials oriented databases.
Last update: TAJ143 (27.09.2013)
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Students will be able to: Have an overview of existing forensic databases Understand the principles of acquisition, processing and entry of data into these databases; understand which properties/characteristics are in certain types of databases available Search for data in demo versions of selected databases Last update: TAJ143 (02.07.2013)
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1. General introduction to databases 2. General introduction to databases II 3. General introduction to databases III 4. Technical means for safe and ciphered access to databases, risk of information leaks 5. Searching for more documents about forensic analysis - journals, patents, web sources 6. "Chemistry": Drugs, pills, toxicological databases 7. DNA databases 8. "Materials": car glass, glass, paints, textiles, fibers, nuclear materials, combustibles, combustible materials, soils, gunpowder, ... 9. "Image and other databases": Trasology, dactyloscopic, ballistic and other image databases 10. Spectroscopic databases - UV/VIS 11. Spectroscopic databases - IR (HITRAN, GEISA) 12. Spectroscopic databases - NMR, X-ray, MS 13. Spectra - predictors, estimate methods Last update: Jirát Jiří (31.08.2015)
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teaching materials supplied directly by lecturer Last update: TAJ143 (02.07.2013)
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Chemical Informatics, Analytical Chemistry I, Biochemistry I Last update: TAJ143 (02.07.2013)
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Teaching methods | ||||
Activity | Credits | Hours | ||
Účast na přednáškách | 0.5 | 14 | ||
Práce na individuálním projektu | 1 | 28 | ||
Příprava na zkoušku a její absolvování | 1 | 28 | ||
Účast na seminářích | 0.5 | 14 | ||
3 / 3 | 84 / 84 |
Coursework assessment | |
Form | Significance |
Defense of an individual project | 70 |
Examination test | 30 |