Crime Scenes Meet Virtual Reality

You鈥檝e just walked into a hotel room. As you slowly scan the room, you notice an open suitcase by the door, a half-consumed bottle of beer on the desk, a container of pills by the television and 鈥 a dead body on the bed.

Crime Scene Investigations Class

This is the setting for a virtual crime scene in Associate Professor of Forensic Science Casie Parish Fisher鈥檚 Crime Scene Investigations class, where students use virtual reality (VR) goggles and investigate evidence that could be found at a real crime scene.

Parish Fisher uses two 360-degree cameras to shoot footage of mock crime scenes in real places; then she uploads photos and videos to a website that supports 360-degree conferencing. Students use both visual and audio cues to interact with and process the mock crime scene. As they move around the crime scene with VR goggles or on their computer, they can click on hotspots 鈥 bubbles of information that have embedded 360-degree photos, case information and instructions on how to proceed with the investigation.

鈥淭hey often want to know what happened,鈥 Parish Fisher says. 鈥淏ut I tell them all the time: It鈥檚 not your job to find out who did it. It鈥檚 your job to assess what you see, properly package it and preserve it, and get it to the laboratory for analysis.鈥

鈥淚 try to be very up front with my students as to what they can expect in the field,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 still do law enforcement training and interact with agencies all over the state to keep up with the changes that are happening. I want it to be as close to the real world as possible.鈥

She also makes sure her students know that what they see on television isn鈥檛 always an accurate representation of the real world. For one of their projects, students work as a group to analyze forensic-based shows like CSI and Bones. They find a quote or a scene that is either accurate or inaccurate, and they support their analysis using information from their practical crime-scene processing and investigation textbook.

Although the world has changed significantly in the last year, the pandemic precautions have reinforced what Parish Fisher was already teaching in her classes. 鈥淭his is really not out of protocol for what we would be doing normally,鈥 she says. 鈥淲hen you鈥檙e working a crime scene, you鈥檙e expected to wear a mask and use gloves for anything that you touch. I like for my students to get used to writing in gloves because when you鈥檙e on a scene, you have to take handwritten notes, and you have to write with gloves. The sooner your hands get accustomed to having those on, the better.鈥

VR Technology in the Classroom

Parish Fisher hasn鈥檛 seen the VR Technology being widely applied yet in the field, but its use in the classroom could soon become more widespread, and not just in her Crime Scene Investigations class. She鈥檚 already had discussions with other professors at 福利黄色激情四射51鈥檚 who have shown interest in using it in math courses to look at 3D shapes, or in mock trial courses so students could get a 360-degree look inside a courtroom. 鈥淎t St. Ed鈥檚, with teaching being at the forefront of what we do, I think we鈥檙e always trying to push the envelope and really be on the cutting edge, with our teaching styles and what we鈥檙e presenting in the classroom,鈥 she says.

The students in the Crime Scene Investigations class move seamlessly between learning in the VR world and learning in person with patience, flexibility and an eagerness for more knowledge 鈥 all important qualities for a crime scene investigator. 鈥淭hey learn pretty quickly that it鈥檚 not glamorous work,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut if you love it, you鈥檙e hooked on it for life, and you love the thrill of going into work and never knowing what you鈥檙e going to see that day.鈥

鈥淚 try to be very up front with my students as to what they can expect in the field,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 still do law enforcement training and interact with agencies all over the state to keep up with the changes that are happening. I want it to be as close to the real world as possible.鈥
Casie Parish Fisher Associate Professor of Forensic Science

"Hands On" Crime Scene Investigation Experience

Students participating in a class and learning how to inspect a crime scene on campus

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