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Forensic Likelihood Ratio×Classificação de Texto×
ÁreaCiências forensesMineração de texto
FamíliaRegression modelProcess / pipeline
Ano de origem2004
Autor originalColin Aitken & Franco Taroni
TipoBayesian evidence evaluation modelSupervised NLP classification task
Fonte seminalAitken, C. G. G., & Taroni, F. (2004). Statistics and the Evaluation of Evidence for Forensic Scientists (2nd ed.). Wiley. ISBN: 978-0-470-84367-3Joachims, T. (1998). Text Categorization with Support Vector Machines: Learning with Many Relevant Features. ECML 1998. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 1398. Springer. DOI ↗
Outros nomesBayes Factor in Forensics, Forensic Evidence Weight, LR-Based Forensic Evaluation, Adli Olabilirlik Oranıtext categorization, document classification, topic classification, metin sınıflandırma
Relacionados34
ResumoThe Forensic Likelihood Ratio (LR) is a Bayesian framework for quantifying the weight of forensic evidence relative to two competing propositions — typically the prosecution and defence hypotheses. Formally developed and systematised by Colin Aitken and Franco Taroni in their 2004 Wiley monograph, the LR expresses how much more probable the observed evidence is under one hypothesis than under the other, providing the court with a single, interpretable number that separates the scientist's role from the fact-finder's role.Text classification, also called text categorization, is a supervised natural-language-processing task that automatically assigns documents to predefined categories. Building on the support-vector-machine approach to text categorization established by Joachims (1998) and consolidated in the text-mining literature by Aggarwal and Zhai (2012), it powers tasks such as spam detection and topic classification by learning from labelled examples.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Forensic Likelihood Ratio · Text Classification. Recuperado em 2026-06-18 de https://scholargate.app/pt/compare