The indian police Science Conference was conducted recently in Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh's capital. DSP Priyadarshini of the Villupuram district Gingerbread, who represented tamil Nadu at a conference attended by police officers from other states, has submitted a paper on how to compute criminals' iris movement and discover the truth. In the villages, there is a saying that says, "What a man hides with his words, his eyes will reveal." According to DSP Priyadarshini, the culprits of a case may be detected by the movements of the irises of the eyes, which is the essence of the psychology that comes into play.

When asked about this theory, DSP Priyadarshini remarked that the action of a criminal who hides the truth can be easily caught using technologies that examine the movement of his eyes. According to him, this might significantly cut forensic science investigation and justice administration delays.

She went on to say that the imminent justice obtained through this iris test would protect Article 21 of the indian Constitution, Article 21 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article 10 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and Article 14 of the international Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Chembukutty, Priyadarshini's grandpa, was a native of tirunelveli who joined the tamil Nadu police as an Assistant Inspector of police in 1949 and retired in 1987. In the same year, his father, Arumugasami, joined the service as an Assistant Inspector of police and is now the Deputy Commissioner of Transport in Madurai.

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