首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Statistic Ⅰ. The defendant is guilty or not? 1) Expert: A. A DNA sample【1】defendant’s.
Statistic Ⅰ. The defendant is guilty or not? 1) Expert: A. A DNA sample【1】defendant’s.
admin
2011-03-10
26
问题
Statistic
Ⅰ. The defendant is guilty or not?
1) Expert:
A. A DNA sample【1】defendant’s. 【1】______
B. The possibility of odds is one in million.
2) Defense lawyer:
Counter the fact that if in a city of three million people, there are【2】【2】______
matching each other’s DNA.
Ⅱ. Unjust discrimination?
1) Universities add additional points to minority group students.
They unlawfully make an easier【3】for those students. 【3】______
2) Annie was kept from【4】. Her lawyer used statistics to show 【4】______
that workers, who were not in【5】group, with the same 【5】______
qualifications were promoted.
3) Tobacco companies won the cases because of the【6】. 【6】______
Warning: statistics should be【7】along with other evidence. 【7】______
Ⅲ. Statistics in calculation:
1)【8】analysis: e.g. Bert could no longer work. Statisticians 【8】______
predict how long he could work and how long he could have made.
2) Multiple regression analysis: Statistician finds the "best fit"
for all the sample data when multiple independent【9】are at work. 【9】______
Ⅳ. Statistics on the witness stand:
--experts know how to make statistics【10】 【10】______
--cross examine and challenge the validity of statistics
【2】
Statistics
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Today, we are going to have a lecture on statistics. Firstly, let’s see the effect of statistics in the courtroom.
After the November 2000 election, Americans waited while court challenges debated who won Florida’s electoral votes. In Palm Beach County, third-party candidate Pat Buchanan got a higher percentage of votes than he did elsewhere. Was that because the country’s "butterfly ballot" caused many Albert Gore supporters to punch the wrong hole? Lawyers also argued about other claimed irregularities in the balloting.
The Supreme Court finally stopped all vote recounts in early December. But if Gore’s statistical arguments had convinced the judges, he would have become president instead of George W. Bush. More than ever, plaintiffs must often prove their case with numbers. Let’s see’ how statistics is taking center stage in some other courtroom cases.
Let’s see the first case whether the defendant is guilty or not.
Imagine you’re on the jury in a murder case. An expert testifies about DNA evidence. She says that a sample from the crime scene matches a defendant’s. She also gives the odds that someone else would randomly match the tested fragments. If the odds are one in a million, the makes it sound very likely that the defendant is, in fact, guilty. The defense lawyer may try to counter that by saying that in a city of three million people, at least two others would also probably match. Of course, the defendant was not arrested at random. Almost always, police have some other evidence linking a person to a crime. But the statistics supporting DNA evidence may be just the proof needed to find someone guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
Now, I would like you to look at the cases against unjust discrimination.
In a U.S. Supreme Court case earlier this year, lawyers argued over whether a state university’s admission plan unlawfully added points for students from certain minority groups. Statistically, that made it easier for those students to get in. Statistics factors into other discrimination cases, too. Suppose Annie claims that unlawful discrimination kept her from getting a promotion. Her lawyers may use statistics to show that workers with the same qualifications were significantly more likely to get promotions if they were male or not in a minority group. If the employer can’t show that Annie didn’t do her job well, she could then win her case.
Age, family history, exercise habits, diet, weight, and other factors affect the likelihood of developing cancer, heart disease, and other illnesses. For years, tobacco companies said that smoking was not the cause of plaintiffs getting sick. They won most cases against them. Then, judges and juries listened to statistical evidence that even when other factors were equal, smokers had much higher disease risks. Finally, some cases started to hold tobacco companies liable, or legally responsible.
Of course, the plaintiffs had other evidence, too. Tobacco companies own documents showed that they knew about disease risks. Yet their ads still targeted young people. In other words, the statistics did not stand alone. When using statistics, it is important to understand that statistical evidence complements other forms of evidence. Statistical evidence should be evaluated along with other evidence and not alone.
And then how can the court work out the compensation the victims should gain? Statistics help add up damages actually. Statistics help decide how much people or companies must pay if they are liable. Suppose a defect in a car caused an accident. As a result, Bert could no longer work. Statistics could show how long Bert would other wise have worked and how much he probably would have made. When two variables correlate with each other statisticians can often predict one value from another with regression analysis. If someone plotted all the data points on a scatter plot, the analysis would find the line with the best fit through them.
But suppose that people in case claimed that nearby pollution lowered property values for a whole neighborhood. It may be unfair just to match sale prices with distance form the pollution, or to compare average prices with another town. After all, many factors affect property values: style of house, size, age, number of bathrooms, and so forth. That’s where multiple regression analysis can help. It finds the "best fit" for all the sample data when multiple independent variables are at work. It nets out the effects of all these things that are different, so that you are comparing apples to apples.
You will also know that statistics have the power on the witness stand. Good statistical experts make numbers "user--friendly" for the judge and jury. Many use high-tech graphics and other tools to present their conclusions. But statistics can be and have been misused, typically when people have interpreted that statistics to mean more than they really do. A good statistician is careful to explain just how reliable the statistics really are. Cross-examination lets each side attack the other side’s analysis is flawed. Were data accurate, or may they have been biased? What was the margin of error? Did onevunfairly affect the outcome?
Finally, the jury weighs statistical evidence along with all the other evidence. The verdict makes a real difference in the lives of parties to a case and to our justice system.
Today, we’ve talked about the magic of statistics working in various fields and events, like in the court, in the issues against discrimination, in calculating damages and on the testimony. I hope you would have had a good time.
选项
答案
3 people/2 other people
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/vTYO777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
SuchjoyItwasthespringof1985,andPresidentReaganhadjustgivenMotherTeresatheMedalofFreedominaRoseGardencere
Awordwithseveralmeaningsiscalleda(n)______.
Whichofthefollowingstatementsisnottrue?
TheU.S.Constitutionrequiresthatthepresidentshouldbea______-year-oldnativebornAmericancitizen,livingintheStat
TheAmericansdeclaredtheirindependencein______onJuly4th,1776.
Theivory-billedwoodpecker,ifyouhaven’theard,isnolongerextinct.Inlatespring,agroupof17researchersannouncedin
Amongherfellowastronomers,VeraRubinisknownasanexpertobserverofthenightsky,oneofthebest.Herreputationderive
NewEnglandisinthe______oftheUnitedStates.
Bothsyntaxandsemanticsarethebranchesoflinguistics,theformerstudiestherulesgoverningthecombinationofwordsinto
Who’stoblamefortheapproximately$2agallonmostAmericanspaidforgasolineontheirThanksgivingDaytravels?Toquote
随机试题
乙醇可在________中被吸收。
公务员处分决定的内容包括
控制癫痫持续状态最佳的方式是
下列叙述有误的是()。
关于和解与整顿的关系,下列说法不正确的是()。
《荷塘月色》的作者是()。
以下各项关于物权和债权区别的表述中错误的是()。
一个柜台出售大、中、小三种型号的衬衫,每种衬衫只有红、黄、蓝三种颜色。小张在这一柜台买了3件衬衫。型号和颜色相同的衬衫称为一样的衬衫;小张买的衬衫都不一样,并且没有都买大号和小号的衬衫,即如果买了大号,则没买小号。该柜台小号红衬衫和大号蓝衬衫断货
在操作系统中,解决进程间的(1)两种基本关系,往往运用对信号量进行(2)的(3)。例如,为保证系统数据库的完整性,可以把信号量定义为某个库文件(或记录)的锁,初值为1,任何进程存取该库文件(或记录)之前先对它作一个(4),存取之后对它作一个(5),从而做到
OneofthesignsoftheawakeningoftheAmericanIndiansis______.
最新回复
(
0
)