Research on probabilistic reasoning has discovered several systematic errors, among which base rate neglect and the fallacy of the transposed conditional have featured prominently. This article introduces the term miss rate neglect to capture the systematic failure to properly account for false positives, i.e. the probability of evidence (E) given the hypothesis (H) is false, P(E|~H). Miss rate neglect occurswhen decision makers (i) completely disregard the miss rate; (ii) underestimate the importance of differences in the miss rate, or (iii) overlook circumstances that affect the miss rate. We explain the relevance of miss rate neglect for legal decisionmaking, reviewextant literature, present newexperimentalwork that empirically validates options (ii) and (iii), and propose experimental variations that future researchmay pursue.
CITATION STYLE
Dahlman, C., Zenker, F., & Sarwar, F. (2016). Miss rate neglect in legal evidence. Law, Probability and Risk, 15(4), 239–250. https://doi.org/10.1093/lpr/mgw007
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