Image for Handbook of forensic statistics

Handbook of forensic statistics (1st)

Banks, David L.(Edited by)Kafadar, Karen(Edited by)Kaye, David H.(Edited by)Tackett, Maria(Edited by)
Part of the Chapman & Hall/CRC Handbooks of Modern Statistical Methods series
See all formats and editions

Handbook of Forensic Statistics is a collection of chapters by leading authorities in forensic statistics. Written for statisticians, scientists, and legal professionals having a broad range of statistical expertise, it summarizes and compares basic methods of statistical inference (frequentist, likelihoodist, and Bayesian) for trace and other evidence that links individuals to crimes, the modern history and key controversies in the field, and the psychological and legal aspects of such scientific evidence.

Specific topics include uncertainty in measurements and conclusions; statistically valid statements of weight of evidence or source conclusions; admissibility and presentation of statistical findings; and the state of the art of methods (including problems and pitfalls) for collecting, analyzing, and interpreting data in such areas as forensic biology, chemistry, and pattern and impression evidence. The particular types of evidence that are discussed include DNA, latent fingerprints, firearms and toolmarks, glass, handwriting, shoeprints, and voice exemplars.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£240.00
Product Details
Chapman & Hall
1000096203 / 9781000096200
eBook (EPUB)
05/11/2020
English
570 pages
Copy: 30%; print: 30%
Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed.