Purdue Offshoot Launches Virtual Reality Crime Scene Training

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Connor Hazzard, fourth-year Purdue Northwest physical sciences student, examines a shell casing for tool marks as part of a capstone research project. Hazzard and other students learning under Charles Steele receive hands-on experiences to use innovative technologies in forensic science research and application. Credit: Purdue University Northwest

CBF Forensics, a northwest Indiana forensic and education startup, has launched a virtual reality (VR) programming for forensic crime scene training. 

Crime by the F.I.V.E.S. provides training scenarios that simulate live scenes using VR technology. Charles Steele, founder and president of CBF Forensics, said the VR crime scene training program brings the latest technology and methods to forensic science classrooms and law enforcement agencies, providing affordable and standardized training. 

“Crime scene investigation training is inconsistent across the country; there is currently no national standard. Most initial training takes the form of mock crime scenes that are not governed by global standards or requirements,” said Steele, who also is a lecturer of forensic science and the forensic science coordinator at Purdue University Northwest (PNW). “The professional training that does exist is out of the economic range for most law enforcement agencies and is completely unavailable for most educational institutions. In addition, it is common for agencies to become entrenched in existing methods and not be aware of the latest technology. As a result, practitioners and new students often learn and use outdated methods.”

The Crime by the F.I.V.E.S. VR training program connects to in-person, real-world laboratory exercises that can be used to fill out a full semester course.

“This educational approach allows the latest methods to be economically passed on to the general practitioner,” Steele said. “Where possible, CBF Forensics will provide the latest support chemistry and devices to complement these scenarios.”

Crime by the F.I.V.E.S. will be accessible through school and private learning management systems. Steele said it improves upon other VR crime scene training tools on the market by providing better features and functionality. 

“The simulations follow real physics; if a user bumps into an item, it will move and possibly corrupt the crime scene. The visibility of evidence matches real-world optics,” Steele said. “Crime by the F.I.V.E.S. is just the first in what will be a series of crime scene training scenarios. The original program was built by CIVS, the Center for Innovation through Visualization and Simulation, at PNW. CIVS is a leader in the simulation field, and our relationship will allow CBF Forensics to continue to produce the highest-quality products.”

Along with Crime by the F.I.V.E.S., CBF Forensics will offer additional forensics products for fingerprinting and blood detection applications. Steele said those products will be launched later in 2023.

A historic startup

CBF Forensics licenses its technologies, developed by Steele and collaborators, through the Purdue Innovates Office of Technology Commercialization. CBF Forensics is the first startup launched from Purdue Northwest through the Purdue Innovates office. Purdue University Northwest, serving northwest Indiana, offers more than 70 bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degree programs to nearly 9,000 students. 

CBF Forensics has received support from PNW’s College of Engineering and Sciences and the Center for Innovation through Visualization and Simulation, student research groups at Purdue Northwest’s chemistry and physics department, and student Capstone Plus teams at the Purdue Polytechnic Institute at the West Lafayette campus.

“These student teams are a valuable resource,” Steele said. “Startup companies like ours do not have the resources of a fully staffed R&D laboratory.” 

“The launch of CBF Forensics highlights the impact that Purdue Northwest can have in working with entrepreneurs to advance research that leads toward product commercialization,” said Kenneth C. (Chris) Holford, Purdue Northwest’s provost and vice chancellor for academic affairs. “I believe that commercialization of research products in partnership with the university through entities like the new PNW Impact Lab will play an increasingly important role in future regional economic development.”

CBF Forensics also received support from Purdue’s Technical Assistance Program, or TAP40, and Purdue’s Manufacturing Extension Partnership. Steele said he is grateful to have worked with the people and university resources.

“Going through the process of starting the company, we have worked with dozens of students and faculty across three campuses within the Purdue system,” Steele said. “We have also worked with business and science professionals through Purdue Research Foundation and the University of Illinois Chicago’s forensic science program. We are excited to be open for business.”

Republished courtesy of Purdue University. 

 

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