A response to “Likelihood ratio as weight of evidence: A closer look” by Lund and Iyer

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_78774196195F
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
A response to “Likelihood ratio as weight of evidence: A closer look” by Lund and Iyer
Journal
Forensic Science International
Author(s)
Gittelson Simone, Berger Charles E.H., Jackson Graham, Evett Ian W., Champod Christophe, Robertson Bernard, Curran James M., Taylor Duncan, Weir Bruce S., Coble Michael D., Buckleton John S.
ISSN
0379-0738
Publication state
Published
Issued date
22/05/2018
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
288
Pages
e15-e19
Language
english
Abstract
Recently, Lund and Iyer (L&I) raised an argument regarding the use of likelihood ratios in court. In our view,
their argument is based on a lack of understanding of the paradigm. L&I argue that the decision maker
should not accept the expert’s likelihood ratio without further consideration. This is agreed by all parties.
In normal practice, there is often considerable and proper exploration in court of the basis for any
probabilistic statement. We conclude that L&I argue against a practice that does not exist and which no one
advocates. Further we conclude that the most informative summary of evidential weight is the likelihood
ratio. We state that this is the summary that should be presented to a court in every scientific assessment
of evidential weight with supporting information about how it was constructed and on what it was based.
Keywords
Forensic evidence interpretation, evidential weight, LR, Bayesian approach, Bayes’ theorem
Create date
31/05/2018 14:45
Last modification date
20/08/2019 15:35
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