In forensic DNA casework, the interpretation of an evidentiary profile may be dependent upon the assumption of the number of individuals from whom the evidence arose. Three methods of inferring the number of contributors NOCIt, maximum likelihood estimator, and maximum allele count, were evaluated using 100 test samples consisting of one to five contributors and 0.5-0.016ng template DNA amplified with available resources. Results indicate that NOCIt was the most accurate method of the three, requiring 0.07ng template DNA from any one contributor to consistently estimate the true number of contributors. Additionally, NOCIt returned repeatable results for 91% of samples analyzed in quintuplicate, while 50 single-source standards proved sufficient to calibrate the software. The data indicate that computational methods that employ a quantitative, probabilistic approach provide improved accuracy and additional pertinent information such as the uncertainty associated with the inferred number of contributors. (Published abstract modified)
Downloads
Similar Publications
- The Cross-Reactivity of the Cannabinoid Analogs (delta-8-THC, delta-10-THC and CBD) and their metabolites in Urine of Six Commercially Available Homogeneous Immunoassays, Grant Report
- Restoring Promise: Positive Research Results from a Program that Aims to Transform Correctional Culture
- Life and death: A systematic comparison of antemortem and postmortem gene expression