In vivo ultrasonic characterization of the skin was performed at 40 MHz by estimating the slope of the attenuation coefficient in the human dermis. The centroid algorithm was first tested on simulated backscattered RF lines with a second-order autoregressive model to carry out the spectral analysis. A relative error of less than 8.5% and a relative precision of less than 6% were predicted for a 2-mm tissue thickness and for temporal window sizes ranging from 0.25 to 0.45 micros. In vivo measurements performed on 138 healthy volunteers yielded values of the attenuation coefficient slope ranging from 0.8 to 3.6 dB/cm MHz. A decrease was observed with advancing age, but no significant difference appeared between men and women. The results from this study suggest that this acoustic parameter shows the effect of the ageing process on normal skin tissue in vivo.