Statistics and the Evaluation of Evidence for Forensic Scientists. Franco Taroni
may be written as
(1.9)
where the conditioning on
1.7.9.1 Independence
If two events
they are said to be independent. Uncertainty about
Independent events are exchangeable. It is not necessarily the case that exchangeable events are independent. See Taroni et al. (2018) for a discussion. Also, two events which are mutually exclusive cannot be independent. As an example of independence, consider the rolling of two six‐sided fair dice,
Third law of probability for independent events
The third law, assuming
(1.10)
Notice that the event
Consider Table 1.3 again. If DVI and DAI were independent then the probability of both occurring in a road accident fatality would be the product of the probability of each happening separately. Thus
However, it is not the case that 9.4% of road accident fatalities have both injuries. An examination of Table 1.3 illustrates that this is not so. From Table 1.3 it can be seen that 14/120 = 0.12 or 12% of fatalities have both injuries. In such a situation where
As another example of the use of the ideas of independence, consider a diallelic system in genetics in which the alleles are denoted
(homozygotes for allele ),
(heterozygotes),
(homozygotes for allele ).
The genotype probabilities are calculated by simply multiplying the two allele probabilities together on the assumption that the allele inherited from one's father is independent of the allele inherited from one's mother. The factor 2 arises in the heterozygous case because two cases must be considered, that in which allele
Table 1.4 Genotype probabilities, assuming Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium, for a diallelic system with allele probabilities
Allele from mother | Allele from father | |
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