Stacyhs
Penultimate Amazing
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=12878629#post12878629
A useful non-technical reference on the analysis of profiles of DNA mixtures:
https://www.nist.gov/featured-stories/dna-mixtures-forensic-science-explainer
Here is a quote from the above source with an analogy on DNA mixtures:
"UNCERTAINTY #2: Whose peak is it anyway?
When analyzing a DNA mixture, the alleles from all the contributors show up on the same chart. This can make it difficult to tease apart the DNA profiles of the individual contributors. To understand why this makes things complicated, recall that after amplifying the DNA, the forensic scientist has a test tube with millions of copies of the alleles in solution. Think of that test tube as a bowl of alphabet soup.
In this bowl of soup, each letter represents a different type of allele. Our suspect is named JOHN Q SUSPECT.
We analyze the soup and find that all the letters in the suspect’s name are present. Does that mean someone named JOHN Q SUSPECT contributed to the soup?
Not necessarily. There could have been two contributors named PATRICK QUEEN and JUSTIN OHR. In that case, the soup would have all the letters needed to spell JOHN Q SUSPECT, even though no person with that name contributed to the soup."
The example provided by Numbers comes directly from NIST (National Institute for Standards and Technology):
NIST has produced several PCR-based DNA Profiling Standard Reference Materials (SRMs) for the forensic community. The primary uses of these materials are validation and calibration of currently used methods for quality assurance purposes.
But what do they know? They're only scientists, four of whom are Nobel Prize winners.
Er, best stick to law.
Er, best stick to accounting.
