Kirst, StefanSchäler, Martin2018-01-102018-01-1020132013https://dl.gi.de/handle/20.500.12116/11690The importance of fingerprints and microtraces within the field of criminalistics and forensics is well-known. An upcoming field is the contactless acquisition of traces, because the integrity of traces is preserved Hildebrandt et al. (MM’Sec, pp. 1–8, 2011). A further issue from such an acquisition method is the potential presence of perspective distortions, which we already started to deal with in Kist et al. (SPIE 8546 Conf., pp. 0A/1–0A/12, 2012). Within the scope of a productive use of contactless acquisition methods, preprocessing steps like the equalization come along. In this paper, we give a perspective on requirements for an underlying database and database management system to support the methods of Kist et al. (SPIE 8546 Conf., pp. 0A/1–0A/12, 2012) as a potential real-case scenario. Thereby, we point out possible starting points for parallelization potential and evaluate the benefit. Finally, we integrate an approach to ensure the chain of custody by means of provenance, which is essential for any forensic investigation and evaluate the effect on the overall system performance.Database and Data Management Requirements for Equalization of Contactless Acquired Traces for Forensic Purposes—Provenance and PerformanceText/Journal Article1610-1995