Biedermann A, Bozza S, Taroni F
University of Lausanne, School of Criminal Justice, Lausanne-Dorigny 1015, Switzerland.
Ca'Foscari University Venice, Department of Economics, Venice 30121, Italy; University of Lausanne, School of Criminal Justice, Lausanne-Dorigny 1015, Switzerland.
Sci Justice. 2018 Mar;58(2):159-165. doi: 10.1016/j.scijus.2017.07.002. Epub 2017 Jul 21.
There is ongoing discussion in forensic science and the law about the nature of the conclusions reached based on scientific evidence, and on how such conclusions - and conclusion criteria - may be justified by rational argument. Examples, among others, are encountered in fields such as fingermarks (e.g., 'this fingermark comes from Mr. A's left thumb'), handwriting examinations (e.g., 'the questioned signature is that of Mr. A'), kinship analyses (e.g., 'Mr. A is the father of child C') or anthropology (e.g., 'these are human remains'). Considerable developments using formal methods of reasoning based on, for example (Bayesian) decision theory, are available in literature, but currently such reference principles are not explicitly used in operational forensic reporting and ensuing decision-making. Moreover, applied examples, illustrating the principles, are scarce. A potential consequence of this in practical proceedings, and hence a cause of concern, is that underlying ingredients of decision criteria (such as losses quantifying the undesirability of adverse decision consequences), are not properly dealt with. There is merit, thus, in pursuing the study and discussion of practical examples, demonstrating that formal decision-theoretic principles are not merely conceptual considerations. Actually, these principles can be shown to underpin practical decision-making procedures and existing legal decision criteria, though often not explicitly apparent as such. In this paper, we will present such examples and discuss their properties from a Bayesian decision-theoretic perspective. We will argue that these are essential concepts for an informed discourse on decision-making across forensic disciplines and the development of a coherent view on this topic. We will also emphasize that these principles are of normative nature in the sense that they provide standards against which actual judgment and decision-making may be compared. Most importantly, these standards are justified independently of peoples' observable decision behaviour, and of whether or not one endorses these formal methods of reasoning.
法医学和法律界正在对基于科学证据得出的结论的性质,以及如何通过合理的论证来证明这些结论及结论标准的合理性进行讨论。例如,在指纹(如“这个指纹来自A先生的左手拇指”)、笔迹鉴定(如“有争议的签名是A先生的”)、亲属关系分析(如“A先生是孩子C的父亲”)或人类学(如“这些是人类遗骸”)等领域都存在这样的讨论。文献中已有基于例如(贝叶斯)决策理论等形式推理方法的重大进展,但目前这些参考原则在实际的法医报告及后续决策中并未得到明确应用。此外,阐释这些原则的应用实例也很稀少。在实际诉讼中,这可能产生的一个后果,因而也是一个令人担忧的原因,是决策标准的潜在要素(如量化不利决策后果不良程度的损失)未得到妥善处理。因此,开展对实际案例的研究和讨论是有价值的,这表明形式决策理论原则不仅仅是概念上的考量。实际上,可以证明这些原则是实际决策程序和现有法律决策标准的基础,尽管它们往往并非如此明显地显现出来。在本文中,我们将展示此类实例,并从贝叶斯决策理论的角度讨论它们的特性。我们将论证,对于跨法医学科的决策进行明智的讨论以及形成关于该主题的连贯观点而言,这些都是至关重要的概念。我们还将强调,这些原则具有规范性,因为它们提供了可用于比较实际判断和决策的标准。最重要的是,这些标准的合理性独立于人们可观察到的决策行为,也独立于人们是否认可这些形式推理方法。