Foundations of Interpretation - Truth Seekers Toolkit
- Core Aim: Objectively interpret scientific evidence to assist the court.
- Guiding Principles: Impartiality, accuracy, and transparency.
- Expert's Role:
- Explain complex findings clearly.
- State limitations of tests and interpretations.
- Avoid advocacy; focus on scientific truth.
- Key Challenges:
- Observer and cognitive bias.
- Ensuring sample integrity (collection, preservation, chain of custody).
- Communicating statistical significance and uncertainty.
- Foundation Stones:
- Validated scientific methods.
- Meticulous documentation.
- Adherence to ethical guidelines.
⭐ The forensic expert's primary duty is to the court and the administration of justice, not to the party that called them.
Statistical Significance - Numbers Don't Lie?
- P-value:
- Prob. of observed data (or more extreme) if null hypothesis (H₀) true.
- p < 0.05 is a commonly used but arbitrary threshold; modern practice emphasizes nuanced interpretation considering effect sizes and context rather than rigid cutoffs.
- Doesn't measure effect size or P(H₀ true).
- Confidence Interval (CI):
- Range of plausible values for a parameter (e.g., 95% CI).
- Comprehensive interpretation involves considering precision (CI width) and practical significance, not just whether it excludes 0.
- Likelihood Ratio (LR):
- Strength of evidence for prosecution hypothesis ($H_p$) over defense hypothesis ($H_d$) under BSA framework.
- Formula: $LR = \frac{P(E|H_p)}{P(E|H_d)}$.
- LR > 1: Supports $H_p$; LR < 1: Supports $H_d$; LR = 1: Neutral.
- Bayes' Theorem:
- Updates prior probability of hypothesis given new evidence in BSA admissibility assessments.
- Formula: $P(H|E) = \frac{P(E|H) \times P(H)}{P(E)}$.
- Common Fallacies:
- Prosecutor's Fallacy: Confuses $P(E|innocence)$ with $P(innocence|E)$.
- Defendant's Fallacy: Large number of potential matches downplays evidence.
⭐ A p-value below 0.05 does not mean there is a <5% chance the null hypothesis is true; it's the probability of observing the data if the null hypothesis were true.
Mind Traps & Courtroom - Bias & Testimony
- Cognitive Biases (Mind Traps): Unconscious errors.
- Confirmation Bias: Seeking data confirming one's hypothesis.
- Anchoring Bias: Over-relying on initial information.
- Contextual Bias: Extraneous case details influencing analysis.
- Observer-expectancy Effect: Investigator's expectations skew results.
- Courtroom Testimony (Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam - BSA):
- Expert Witness (Sec 57 BSA): Provides specialized opinion; must be impartial, clear.
- Hostile Witness (Sec 152 BSA): Declared by court; uncooperative/adverse.
- Leading Questions (Sec 137-139 BSA): Suggest answer; generally for cross-examination.
- Ethical Conduct:
- Maintain objectivity, honesty, integrity.
- Duty is to assist the court, not advocate.
⭐ Under Sec 57 BSA, the expert's opinion is advisory; the court retains final judgment authority.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Likelihood Ratio (LR) quantifies evidence strength supporting a hypothesis.
- Bayes' Theorem logically updates belief in hypotheses with new evidence.
- Avoid Prosecutor's Fallacy (P(E|H) ≠ P(H|E)) and Defence Fallacy.
- Sec. 39, Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023 deals with admissibility of expert opinion.
- Chain of Custody ensures evidence integrity; breaks can nullify it.
- Differentiate Class (e.g., soil type) vs. Individual Characteristics (e.g., fingerprint).
- Reports must be objective, stating limitations and avoiding advocacy_._
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