- Joined
- Nov 15, 2020
- Messages
- 1,819
- Reaction score
- 14,238
The Sun and Shoo Lee …. What bedfellows.
Any thoughts on the actual content?The Sun and Shoo Lee …. What bedfellows.
Sort of.
1) There are a number of qualified, authoritative statisticians who have reviewed the case and stated that the chart is evidentially worthless: Gill is far from alone.
2) The "statistics debate" is absolutely relevant to the discussion on this message board. The reason being that in the event posters do not understand the bare essentials of statistics, then of course you will have posters concluding: "the chart itself was nothing more than a visual presentation of the fact that she was present", and other posters agreeing with it. This is an erroneous statement, masquerading as a reasonable argument, being peddled around the board; when really it should be taken to task as complete and utter nonsense (which of course has no place in a reasonable discussion). There's that as well as the fact that Prosecutor Nick Johnson put forth an argument built upon statistics (in his own words).
In the Roy Meadow's case statistics was not a complex science. I would have expected a school pupil doing maths to understand the difference between independent and dependent events.We all poorly know statistics to start with. I just re-read Roy Meadow (Sally Clark’s) case. Had I already not read about his fallacy, I’d probably use the same equation, 1/8500 x 1/8500. But the fact that two “cot deaths” in one family may be connected (genetically, as it was found out) and hence, you don’t treat variables as independent, would not have occurred to me. I hope that I would have had more common sense than Meadows and say, “the odds look impossible” and consult a statistician. Why don’t doctors do it more often? -statistics is a complex science.
Any thoughts on the actual content?
In the Roy Meadow's case statistics was not a complex science. I would have expected a school pupil doing maths to understand the difference between independent and dependent events.
It’s wild to me that Professor Lee and a frankly overwhelming number of eminent, internationally recognised experts in various fields relevant to this case, can be written off on this forum as a ‘mob’!
Reluctant as I am to engage with the Sun’s content, I watched the video and found it very informative. Professor Lee is everything you’d hope for from an expert. What a contrast with the narcissistic Dr Evans!
Er, but they haven't. Don't get caught up in the Maltin PR-backed hurricane of conspiracy theories and false claims that made you believe that.I find it bizarre that anyone should dispute that a conviction is unsafe when so many of the witnesses and evidence has been refuted or undermined.
Roy Meadow is not and never has been a statistician. His sole training is in medicine. A trained statistician would have qualified any evidence by being clear that the numbers he quoted rested upon the assumption that the events (baby deaths) were independent. This is not rocket science and any expert evidence should state any assumptions made in the evidence given. The fault lay in the court admitting expert evidence on a matter for which the witness was not an expert.The whole fact that cot deaths in the same family were not independent was neither known nor discussed. In fact, I thought on reading about the case “what if both kids had narcolepsy?”, but no one in the articles of that time was asking these questions!
But mostly, in such trials, one has to turn to specialists, and if medical statisticians exist, it is strange not to use their expertise.