Standard forensic DNA profiling for human individual identification purposes is only successful in cases where a DNA profile recovered from a human biological crime scene trace matches that of a known suspect, who is directly available via police investigation or indirectly by searching a criminal offender DNA database. However, there is an "information gap" in cases where a perpetrator is unknown i.e. has successfully escaped police investigation, or his/her DNA profile is not in the criminal DNA database. The VISAGE Project has been designed to bridge this information gap by providing reliable information allowing to construct a composite sketch of an unknown trace donor from trace DNA left behind (also referred to as Forensic DNA Phenotyping, FDP). By using this "biological witness" FDP outcome during police investigation, the search for the unknown perpetrator will be focused towards the most likely group of persons, meeting the DNA-based composite sketch outcomes.
VISAGE has allocated previous and established new DNA predictors for appearance, age and ancestry information. VISAGE has developed a basic and an enhanced toolkit based on targeted massively parallel sequencing (MPS) technologies for simultaneous analysis of the selected DNA predictors. VISAGE has designed an integrated statistical interpretation framework for application in a prototype software, for combined consideration of the appearance, age, and ancestry information. Appearance predictors of the enhanced tool include eye, hair and skin colour, eyebrow colour, freckles, hair shape, male pattern baldness. Age prediction depends on a particular human tissue source, and has been designed for blood, saliva, semen, and bones. Autosomal ancestry prediction has been extended to include Y-chromosomal analysis. VISAGE has developed recommendations addressing the main challenges for the ethically, socially and legally responsible implementation of FDP in Europe. The VISAGE basic and enhanced toolkits have been validated and implemented in routine forensic DNA service laboratories. These efforts have been supported by training forensic scientists on technical, interpretational, ethical, and regulatory issues for using the VISAGE toolkits in FDP applications, and by disseminating the major project outcomes to stakeholders and end users. In conclusion, all objectives have been addressed as planned, and the results are included in the respective deliverables.