In the various forensic science disciplines, recent analytical developments paired with modern statistical computational tools have led to the proliferation of ad hoc techniques for quantifying the probative value of forensic evidence. Many legal and scientific scholars agree that the value of evidence should be reported as a likelihood ratio or a Bayes Factor. Quantifying the probative value of forensic evidence is subjected to many sources of variability and uncertainty. There is currently a debate on how to characterize the reliability of the value of evidence. Some authors have proposed associating a confidence/credible interval with the value of evidence assigned to a collection of forensic evidence. (publisher abstract modified)
Downloads
Similar Publications
- Emergency department-based testing for xylazine and other novel psychoactive substances in Central Alabama: a feasibility study
- How old is that fingerprint?
- Forensic Comparison and Matching of Fingerprints: Using Quantitative Image Measures for Estimating Error Rates Through Understanding and Predicting Difficulty