AI Article Synopsis

  • Traditional fingerprint examiners give yes or no conclusions on whether prints match, but there's a shift towards stating probabilities of matches.
  • A study exposed jury-eligible adults to a hypothetical case where they evaluated fingerprint match evidence presented in either categorical or probabilistic terms.
  • Participants generally had similar beliefs about the defendant's involvement when strong evidence was presented, but weaker probabilistic evidence led them to reduce their likelihood assessments without differentiating between varying match probabilities.

Article Abstract

Fingerprint examiners traditionally express conclusions in categorical terms, opining that impressions do or do not originate from the same source. Recently, probabilistic conclusions have been proposed, with examiners estimating the probability of a match between recovered and known prints. This study presented a nationally representative sample of jury-eligible adults with a hypothetical robbery case in which an examiner opined on the likelihood that a defendant's fingerprints matched latent fingerprints in categorical or probabilistic terms. We studied model language developed by the U.S. Defense Forensic Science Center to summarize results of statistical analysis of the similarity between prints. Participant ratings of the likelihood the defendant left prints at the crime scene and committed the crime were similar when exposed to categorical and strong probabilistic match evidence. Participants reduced these likelihoods when exposed to the weaker probabilistic evidence, but did not otherwise discriminate among the prints assigned different match probabilities.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1556-4029.13797DOI Listing

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