Likelihood Ratio as Weight of Forensic Evidence: A Closer Look

被引:45
|
作者
Lund, Steven P. [1 ]
Iyer, Hari [1 ]
机构
[1] NIST, Stat Engn Div, Informat Technol Lab, Gaithersburg, MD 20899 USA
关键词
assumptions lattice; Bayes'factor; Bayes' rule; Bayesian decision theory; subjective probability; uncertainty; uncertainty pyramid; REFRACTIVE-INDEX; CONFIDENCE BANDS;
D O I
10.6028/jres.122.027
中图分类号
TH7 [仪器、仪表];
学科分类号
0804 ; 080401 ; 081102 ;
摘要
The forensic science community has increasingly sought quantitative methods for conveying the weight of evidence. Experts from many forensic laboratories summarize their fndings in terms of a likelihood ratio. Several proponents of this approach have argued that Bayesian reasoning proves it to be normative. We fnd this likelihood ratio paradigm to be unsupported by arguments of Bayesian decision theory, which applies only to personal decision making and not to the transfer of information from an expert to a separate decision maker. We further argue that decision theory does not exempt the presentation of a likelihood ratio from uncertainty characterization, which is required to assess the ftness for purpose of any transferred quantity. We propose the concept of a lattice of assumptions leading to an uncertainty pyramid as a framework for assessing the uncertainty in an evaluation of a likelihood ratio. We demonstrate the use of these concepts with illustrative examples regarding the refractive index of glass and automated comparison scores for fngerprints.
引用
收藏
页数:32
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] The skeptical import of motivated reasoning: a closer look at the evidence
    van Doorn, Maarten
    THINKING & REASONING, 2024, 30 (04) : 548 - 578
  • [22] Surgical interventions for meniscal tears: a closer look at the evidence
    Mutsaerts, Eduard L. A. R.
    van Eck, Carola F.
    van de Graaf, Victor A.
    Doornberg, Job N.
    van den Bekerom, Michel P. J.
    ARCHIVES OF ORTHOPAEDIC AND TRAUMA SURGERY, 2016, 136 (03) : 361 - 370
  • [23] A CLOSER LOOK AT THE NATURE OF ANXIETY IN WEIGHT LOSS SURGERY CANDIDATES
    Edwards-Hampton, Shenelle A.
    Madan, Alok
    Wedin, Sharlene
    Borckardt, Jeffery J.
    Crowley, Nina
    Byrne, Karl T.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY IN MEDICINE, 2014, 47 (02): : 105 - 113
  • [24] Likelihood ratio estimation in forensic identification using similarity and rarity
    Tang, Yi
    Srihari, Sargur N.
    PATTERN RECOGNITION, 2014, 47 (03) : 945 - 958
  • [25] Measuring the validity and reliability of forensic likelihood-ratio systems
    Morrison, Geoffrey Stewart
    SCIENCE & JUSTICE, 2011, 51 (03) : 91 - 98
  • [26] Likelihood ratio methods for forensic comparison of evaporated gasoline residues
    Vergeer, P.
    Bolck, A.
    Peschier, L. J. C.
    Berger, C. E. H.
    Hendrikse, J. N.
    SCIENCE & JUSTICE, 2014, 54 (06) : 401 - 411
  • [27] What should a forensic practitioner's likelihood ratio be? II
    Morrison, Geoffrey Stewart
    SCIENCE & JUSTICE, 2017, 57 (06) : 472 - 476
  • [28] A closer look at return predictability of the US stock market: evidence from new panel variance ratio tests
    Kim, Jae H.
    Shamsuddin, Abul
    QUANTITATIVE FINANCE, 2015, 15 (09) : 1501 - 1514
  • [29] Strength of forensic text comparison evidence from stylometric features: a multivariate likelihood ratio-based analysis
    Ishihara, Shunichi
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SPEECH LANGUAGE AND THE LAW, 2017, 24 (01) : 67 - 98
  • [30] Repeatability and Reproducibility of Forensic Likelihood Ratio Methods when Sample Size Ratio Varies
    Zhu, Xiaochen
    Tang, Larry
    Tabassi, Elham
    2017 IEEE INTERNATIONAL JOINT CONFERENCE ON BIOMETRICS (IJCB), 2017, : 517 - 524