释义 |
- See also
- References
- Bibliography
A Wigmore chart (commonly referred to as Wigmorean analysis) is a graphical method for the analysis of legal evidence in trials, developed by John Henry Wigmore.[1][2] It is an early form of the modern belief network.[3] See also References1. ^Anderson et al. (2005), Chapter 5 2. ^Wigmore (1913), (1937) 3. ^Kadane & Schum (1996) pp66-76
Bibliography- {{cite book | author=Anderson, T.| title=Analysis of Evidence | location=Cambridge | publisher=Cambridge University Press | isbn=0-521-67316-X | edition=2nd | year=2005 |display-authors=etal}}
- {{ cite book |author1=Kadane, J. B. |author2=Schum, D. A. |lastauthoramp=yes | title=A Probabilistic Analysis of the Sacco and Vanzetti Evidence | location=New York | publisher=Wiley | isbn=0-471-14182-8 | year=1996 }}
- {{ cite journal | author=Wigmore, J. H. | year=1913 | title=The problem of proof | journal=Illinois Law Review | volume=8 |issue=2 | pages=77–103 }}
- {{ cite book | author=— | year=1937 | title=The Science of Proof: As Given by Logic, Psychology and General Experience and Illustrated in Judicial Trials | edition=3rd | location=Boston | publisher=Little, Brown }}
{{law-stub}} 2 : Evidence law|Infographics |