Human Identification: The Use of DNA Markers / Edition 1

Human Identification: The Use of DNA Markers / Edition 1

by B. Weir
ISBN-10:
0792335201
ISBN-13:
9780792335207
Pub. Date:
09/30/1995
Publisher:
Springer Netherlands
ISBN-10:
0792335201
ISBN-13:
9780792335207
Pub. Date:
09/30/1995
Publisher:
Springer Netherlands
Human Identification: The Use of DNA Markers / Edition 1

Human Identification: The Use of DNA Markers / Edition 1

by B. Weir

Hardcover

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Overview

The ongoing debate on the use of DNA profiles to identify perpetrators in criminal investigations or fathers in paternity disputes has too often been conducted with no regard to sound statistical, genetic or legal reasoning. The contributors to Human Identification: The Use of DNA Markers all have considerable experience in forensic science, statistical genetics or jurimetrics, and many of them have had to explain the scientific issues involved in using DNA profiles to judges and juries. Although the authors hold differing views on some of the issues, they have all produced accounts which pay due attention to the, sometimes troubling, issues of independence of components of the profiles and of population substructures. The book presents the considerable evolution of ideas that has occurred since the 1992 Report of the National Research Council of the U.S.
Audience: Indispensable to forensic scientists, laying out the concepts to all those with an interest in the use of genetic information. The chapters and exhaustive bibliography are vital information for all lawyers who must prosecute or defend DNA cases, and to judges trying such cases.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780792335207
Publisher: Springer Netherlands
Publication date: 09/30/1995
Series: Contemporary Issues in Genetics and Evolution , #4
Edition description: Reprinted from GENETICA 96:1-2, 1995
Pages: 215
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.24(d)

Table of Contents

A method for quantifying differentiation between populations at multi-allelic loci and its implications for investigating identity and paternity.- The effect of relatedness on likelihood ratios and the use of conservative estimates.- The effects of inbreeding on DNA profile frequency estimates using PCR-based loci.- Correlation of DNA fragment sizes within loci in the presence of non-detectable alleles.- Inference of population subdivision from the VNTR distributions of New Zealanders.- Conditioning on the number of bands in interpreting matches of multilocus DNA profiles.- Match probability calculations for multi-locus DNA profiles.- Population genetics of short tandem repeat (STR) loci.- Assessing probability of paternity and the product rule in DNA systems.- The forensic debut of the NRC’s DNA report: population structure, ceiling frequencies and the need for numbers.- Applications of the Dirichlet distribution to forensic match probabilities.- The honest scientist’s guide to DNA evidence.- A comparison of tests for independence in the FBI RFLP data bases.- Alternative approaches to population structure.- DNA evidence: wrong answers or wrong questions?.- Subjective interpretation, laboratory error and the value of forensic DNA evidence: three case studies.- Exact tests for association between alleles at arbitrary numbers of loci.- A bibliography for the use of DNA in human identification.
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