
Different brands of shoe that share the same sole pattern are contained within the SoleMate database. |
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A reference database of footwear to
assist in the identification of shoes
from shoe prints
The latest edition of 'SoleMate', Foster & Freeman's footwear database,
contains details of over 16,500 sports, work and casual shoes. Its purpose
is to identify shoes from shoe prints recovered from scenes of crime and it
may be used as a stand alone system or with SICAR, the company's shoe
print evidence management system.
Each record in SoleMate contains the shoe's manufacturer, the
manufacturer's reference for that shoe, the date of its release on to the
market, an image or off-set print of the sole, several pictorial images of the
uppers, to aid recognition, and a set of pattern feature codes that facilitate
search and match operations. Where different manufacturers have used
the same sole unit (a common practice), SoleMate records are linked to
allow the operator to consider all the footwear that might have been
responsible for a crime scene print.
To use the database, the pattern of the unidentified shoe print is first
assigned a set of codes, a simple procedure that requires the operator to identify elemental pattern features within the shoe print, such as circles,
diamonds, zigzags, curves, blocks etc. These options are presented to the
operator, pictorially with variations for the operator to select those that best
match the features within the shoe print. The codes assigned to these
pattern features form the basis of the database search. The results of a
search are presented in descending order of pattern correlation for the
operator to examine visually.
SoleMate is continually updated and distributed to subscribers every three
months on DVD.

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