Vicky Amper

: During her time at DLSU, she served as the President of the Junior Philippine Institute of Accountants (JPIA) and as an Auditor for the DLSU Honors Society.

, a significant accolade given to top-performing students in the field. Student Leadership vicky amper

Amper was a fixture in the hallowed recording studios of the era, particularly in the bustling scene around Manlapaz Studios and other recording hubs. She became part of an elite circle of sessionists who were the "first call" for producers wanting a flawless sound. In an era before digital correction and quantization, the notes had to be played perfectly in real-time, and Amper delivered take after take with precision and soul. : During her time at DLSU, she served

: Director at Citibank, N.A., where she has held various leadership positions within the organization's Philippine operations. She became part of an elite circle of

She is currently pioneering research into "Touch DNA persistence"—how long does a person’s DNA remain on a surface after they touch it under varying conditions of heat, humidity, and friction. Additionally, her lab is experimenting with the separation of mixed DNA profiles (where two or more people’s cells are intermingled) without computational guessing, using physical separation via laser capture microdissection.

In this high-pressure environment, where technical proficiency was the currency of respect, Vicky Amper carved out a niche that few could contest. She emerged not as a novelty—a "female guitarist"—but as a guitarist par excellence. Her gender was irrelevant in the face of her talent; she was simply one of the best.

Amper is also credited with solving a series of home invasions in the Pacific Northwest where the suspect wore gloves and a mask. The only contact the suspect had with the scene was a momentary touch of a light switch plate. The friction ridge skin (fingerprint) was smudged, but extracted the shed skin cells from the surface of the plastic switch plate. The resulting DNA hit a cold hit in the national database, linking the suspect to three other unsolved home invasions.