Confidence Interval of the Likelihood Ratio Associated with Mixed Stain DNA Evidence*
- 22 October 2010
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Forensic Sciences
- Vol. 56 (s1) , S166-S171
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1556-4029.2010.01600.x
Abstract
Abstract: Likelihood ratios are necessary to properly interpret mixed stain DNA evidence. They can flexibly consider alternate hypotheses and can account for population substructure. The likelihood ratio should be seen as an estimate and not a fixed value, because the calculations are functions of allelic frequency estimates that were estimated from a small portion of the population. Current methods do not account for uncertainty in the likelihood ratio estimates and are therefore an incomplete picture of the strength of the evidence. We propose the use of a confidence interval to report the consequent variation of likelihood ratios. The confidence interval is calculated using the standard forensic likelihood ratio formulae and a variance estimate derived using the Taylor expansion. The formula is explained, and a computer program has been made available. Numeric work shows that the evidential strength of DNA profiles decreases as the variation among populations increases.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- DNA commission of the International Society of Forensic Genetics: Recommendations on the interpretation of mixturesForensic Science International, 2006
- An introduction to Bayesian credible intervals for sampling error in DNA profilesLaw, Probability and Risk, 2005
- DNA mixtures in forensic casework: a 4-year retrospective studyForensic Science International, 2003
- Forensic utility of mitochondrial DNA analysis based on denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography.2003
- Mixed stains from sexual assault cases: autosomal or Y-chromosome short tandem repeats?2003
- A comparison of adjustment methods to test the robustness of an STR DNA database comprised of 24 European populationsForensic Science International, 2003
- Assessing uncertainty in DNA evidence caused by sampling effectsScience & Justice, 2002
- The calculation of DNA match probabilities in mixed race populationsScience & Justice, 2000
- Estimating Products in Forensic Identification Using DNA ProfilesJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1995
- DNA profile match probability calculation: how to allow for population stratification, relatedness, database selection and single bandsForensic Science International, 1994