This subject arose again when I was trying to log into a device with fingerprint technology. I hadn’t used the device for a few years, so I had no clue of the password. And since the technology couldn’t get a good scan of my fingerprints, it remains locked.
Ah, well.
Thankfully, my iPhone uses facial recognition software. There may be a way to break into the locked device through my phone… if I recall why I wanted into it in the first place. Sigh.
If it sounds like I need some R&R, you’re right. Hence why I plan to head south and unplug till Wednesday. Still might work on my passion project WIP in between play dates with chickens, crows, and fur-babies.
In a recent chat with Jordan, she mentioned that when she went for her TSA pre-check ID for her trip, they couldn’t detect her digital fingerprints.
They said, since she spent so much time at a computer keyboard as a writer, she’s deteriorated her ridge detail.
Could this be true of all professional writers?
As you might have guessed, this question sent me down a rabbit hole of research, because I’ve had trouble with my iPhone’s digital fingerprint scan. It only recognizes my thumbprint, not any other finger. Which I figured was just a glitch with the phone. Now, I’m not so sure.
Before we can prove or disprove TSA’s conclusion, we first need to know the basics.
What is a fingerprint?
A fingerprint is a pattern of friction ridge details, comprised of ridges and valleys. A ridge is a high point, a valley is a depression or low point. Friction ridges are also found on our palms, feet, and toes. “Pattern” equals the unique characteristics of the ridges and valleys that make up the print, defined by the spatial relationship of multiple lines, their beginning and terminating points, and the unique pattern they create.
Each ridge contains tiny pores connected to sweat glands beneath the skin. When we touch an object, sweat and oils release from these pores and leave behind a print, latent or visible. The genes from our parents determine the general characteristics of the pattern.
Fun fact: Like human fingerprints, a dog’s nose has a unique identifiable pattern. In fact, many dog clubs now keep nose prints on file.
If you’d like to learn how to print your dog’s nose, see this post.
Sir Francis Galton was the first person to classify fingerprints into different types based on the three basic features: loops, arches, and whorls. Learn more about points, types, and classifications HERE.
Fingerprints form before birth and remain unchanged until the body decomposes after death.
There are two exceptions to “remain unchanged”…
If, say, someone sliced the tip of their finger with a knife, it may leave behind a scar. But then, their fingerprint would be even more distinguishable because of that scar.
Along similar lines, severe burns can also damage the deep layers of skin and obliterate the ridge detail. However, much like the knife injury, the scars that form would become the injured party’s unique identifiers.
The other exception has to do with the elderly. As we age, we lose skin elasticity, which may affect ridge detail. The fingerprints become wider; the spaces between the ridges narrower. Even though the fingerprint still exists, fingerprint technology may find it more difficult to detect.
Can someone be born without fingerprints?
In a few rare cases, yes. One condition called adermatoglyphia — also known as “immigration delay disease” — can result in a child being born without fingerprints. In some cases, these infants have almost no other health issues. In other cases, this condition could cause skin abnormalities, including tiny white bumps on the face, blistering of the skin, and/or a lack of sweat glands. Adermatoglyphia has only been documented in four families worldwide.
Naegeli Syndrome is another rare condition that halts the production of fingerprints in utero. Said syndrome is characterized by reticular skin pigmentation (meaning, mottled, purplish, and lace-like splotches), diminished function of the sweat glands, and the absence of teeth. Individuals with Naegeli Syndrome have sweat gland abnormalities. Not only do they lack fingerprints but they also suffer from heat intolerance due to a decrease or total inability to sweat.
Do Twins Have the Same Fingerprints?
No. Twins do not have identical fingerprints. Our prints are as unique as snowflakes. Actually, we have a 1 in 64 billion chance of having the same fingerprints as someone else.
Sci-fi writers could potentially take advantage of these odds, but it’d be tricky to pull off.
Who’s most at risk for losing their fingerprints?
Patients undergoing chemotherapy — such as capecitabine (Xeloda), for example — are most at risk. With prolonged use of this medication, the finger-pad skin can become inflamed, swollen, and damaged to the point of erasing the ridge detail, according to DP Lyle, MD, author of Forensics for Dummies. Chemotherapy may also cause severe peeling of the palms and soles of the feet. The medical term for this condition is called Hand-Foot Syndrome.
Skin diseases like scleroderma, psoriasis, and eczema also have the potential to obliterate the ridge pattern.
Which professions cause the most damage to fingerprints?
Bricklayers and other heavy manual laborers can wear down their fingerprint ridges to the point where no pattern is visible. Secretaries and file clerks who handle paper all day can have a similar thing occur. Typists (Writers!) and piano players can suffer the same alterations. Hairstylists, dry cleaning workers, and those who work with lime (calcium oxide) are often exposed to chemicals that dissolve the upper layers of the skin, thereby flattening the ridge detail.
So, to answer our initial question, was TSA correct?
Yes! Pounding on the keyboard can wear away a writer’s fingerprints.
How might the lack of fingerprints cause problems?
Losing one’s prints can cause issues with crossing international borders and even logging on to certain computer systems.
Fortunately, fingerprint technology is always evolving and improving.
As more and more careers require hours of keyboard time, someday retinal scanners, facial recognition, and voice prints will replace the current technology.
Have you ever been told you have no digital fingerprints? Have you experienced any problems with fingerprint technology?
Happy Labor Day! Can you believe it’s September already? Where’d that summer go?
Most of mine are gone, I think. In a fingerprint workshop at the Writers Police Academy, I couldn’t get clear prints (and the expert instructor couldn’t, either.) It took many, many tries when I went to get my Global Entry credentials, and when I use Clear at an airport, I always use the retina option.
Enjoy your getaway!
I, too, had trouble getting good fingerprints for a particular license. At the time, I blamed the instructor for the weird way he held my hand and finger as he rolled it on the pad. Especially so when a follow-up try at a local police station went smooth as silk.
But I used to handle large amounts of paper as well as money (so gross! I washed my hands a lot then too!) And now I bang keyboards.
However, when I enrolled for Clear, I had no issues, so who knows?
My fingerprints don’t show on digital scanners either. TSA Pre-check had a terrible time trying to get my prints.
Does this mean writers don’t need to wear nitrile gloves when they commit crimes? Oh darn, forgot about that pesky DNA we could leave behind. 😉
Enjoy a non-laboring Labor Day, Sue!
And a Happy Labor Day to you!
Thanks for this fascinating info, Sue…I’d never heard of this before.
Always, always come away with something new to add to my knowledge bank (and trivia banks, too…) here in these halls.
😎
Apparently, having ME/CFS, as I do, can result in losing your fingerprints.
I still have mine – it’s very helpful to be able to put my thumb on the on button for my Mac Air to sign into Keychain for login and password information – but I don’t know if they’re on the way out.
There may be some connection to the severity of the disease, but I don’t remember seeing the topic come up on our forums. Just another little weird sometimes symptom.
My prints aren’t detected on a digital scanner. I was thinking about applying for the Global Entry credentials, so knowing they can do the retina option is good. Some airports don’t use Clear…the one I usually fly out of, for example.
Happy Labor Day, Sue, and thanks for the info on fingerprints. I was fingerprinted years ago when a job I had required a security clearance, so I’m on file. 🙂
Around here, we’re happy to say good-bye to summer. We’re heading into my favorite season when the temps are cooler and the air is no longer sticky. Have a great writing season!
Another cause of losing your fingerprints is using paper a lot. I went to get a fingerprint card done. It took the person over an HOUR to get my fingerprints for the card so I could work.
And that was before I did a ton of typing. But I used a lot of paper and in handling the paper, the ridges were worn down. As it is, I can’t get a CCW because they can’t get a decent set of fingerprints–Hmm–maybe I could become a criminal–they’d have a heck of time lifting fingerprints consider the experts couldn’t get them.
And yes, the FBI knows who I am from my computer searches. I’m listed under authors and my friend checks my browsing history every so often just to find out what new method of murder I’m working on.
I was a fingerprint expert back in the day and fingerprinted hundreds of people. The one with the smoothest fingertips–no prints at all–was a blind woman. I stupidly asked if she read a lot, because it looked like the damage done to fingertips from handling a lot of paper. She said yes, however. She was a college student and did a LOT of reading. In brail. So that removed her fingerprints. Once she graduated, I would expect her prints returned.