Science
Générateur de prompts de criminalistique
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A forensic science prompt generator produces structured study prompts on the science of investigating evidence. Choose how many you want and it returns prompts spanning the core methods — DNA profiling with short tandem repeats, Locard’s exchange principle, fingerprint classification, chain of custody, forensic entomology, blood spatter analysis, toxicology screening, trace evidence, ballistics, and forensic anthropology. Forensic science, biology, and criminology students use the prompts to test real understanding, teachers to set revision tasks, and the curious to see how science reconstructs events from physical traces. Forensic science is best learned by connecting a technique to the evidence it analyses and the question it answers. Use a prompt to structure study: name the method, explain how it works, and state what it can and cannot conclude, then check your answer against a textbook. These are educational study aids about scientific methods, not legal advice or instructions for real casework.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Choose how many prompts you want.
- Click Generate to produce study prompts.
- Name the method and explain how it works.
- State its limits and check against a textbook.
Use Cases
- •Structuring a forensic science revision session
- •Setting study tasks for a criminology class
- •Connecting techniques to types of evidence
- •Testing real understanding of forensic methods
- •Prompting a study group to analyse a method
Tips
- →Tie each method to the evidence it analyses.
- →Remember Locard: every contact leaves a trace.
- →Note what a technique cannot conclude.
- →Regenerate for a fresh set of prompts.
FAQ
are these prompts based on real forensics
Yes. Each prompt targets a genuine method — DNA profiling, fingerprint classification, chain of custody, and ballistics — from standard forensic science. Use them to structure study and verify details against an authoritative text.
what is Locard’s exchange principle
It is the foundational idea that every contact leaves a trace: a perpetrator both brings something to a scene and takes something away. This underpins much of trace-evidence analysis, which several prompts explore.
is this legal or casework advice
No. This is a study aid for learning the science behind forensic methods, not legal advice or guidance for real investigations or casework. For legal matters, consult a qualified professional.
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