Hi,
I've been working on a program to generate a way to visually present witness statements based upon a clock type figure that Wickerman used. I've finally got a working proto-type version, and wanted to test it out, so I grabbed this information from Herlock's post where he lists the various news sources that mention Lave being in the yard.
Some are pretty straight forward, as they list actual clock times (the first 3). Some only reference an interval prior to the discovery of the body (20 minutes). So, for testing purposes, left the body discovery at 1:00, making 20 minutes prior to be 12:40. However, two of the sources say he was in the yard for 5 or more minutes, so does that 12:40 refer to the start of that 5 minute interval or the end of it? I've done it both ways. Part of me thinks it would refer to the end of his time in the yard, as it really only makes sense as to how long before the murder he stopped being in the yard rather than refer to the time between when he first went out into the yard and the body was found. The end yard time to body discovery interval is, after, the time window for the murder, so the news would be reporting that - there's a 20 minute window when the murder could have taken place.
The first image shows the representation when I place the start of Lave's 5 minute interval at 20 minutes to 1 (the version I tend not to think likely, but as that's only my opinion and I could be wrong, I thought it best to show it):
Oh, and the minute marks would represent a 12 minute interval (divide the hour into 5 steps, and that's 12 minutes per step).
I've tried to stack the "clock plots", so "higher" means more agreement.
If I place the end of the 5 minute yard time to be at 12:40, then we get this version, and it shows a large commonality between 12:35 and 12:40 (common to all sources, except the Times, which doesn't mention the duration, just the 20 minutes before point in time):
The duration between 12:30 and 12:35 is common to 3 sources (possible more, as the two that say 5 minutes do say 5 or more minutes, but I've not quantified the "or more" bit, obviously if I make "or more" to mean up to 5 more minutes, then 12:30-12:40 would be common to all.
The times that have the least commonality from the sources are from 1:40 to 1:00 (1:45-1:00 in the first plot), which comes from the Evening Standard's interval of 12:30 to 1:00. I think it becomes quite clear that report seems to stand out as being quite different from the others, while the others cluster reasonably well (even the first version has them clustering pretty well).
I've got some ideas of how summarizing witness statements like this might be used to try and work on a time line sequence that also represents the error we have in the information (these plots visually show the variation between the news reports and how they describe Lave's time in the yard).
Anyway, the colours aren't great, and there are some cosmetic things I want to work on, but it's a working version.
I've been working on a program to generate a way to visually present witness statements based upon a clock type figure that Wickerman used. I've finally got a working proto-type version, and wanted to test it out, so I grabbed this information from Herlock's post where he lists the various news sources that mention Lave being in the yard.
Some are pretty straight forward, as they list actual clock times (the first 3). Some only reference an interval prior to the discovery of the body (20 minutes). So, for testing purposes, left the body discovery at 1:00, making 20 minutes prior to be 12:40. However, two of the sources say he was in the yard for 5 or more minutes, so does that 12:40 refer to the start of that 5 minute interval or the end of it? I've done it both ways. Part of me thinks it would refer to the end of his time in the yard, as it really only makes sense as to how long before the murder he stopped being in the yard rather than refer to the time between when he first went out into the yard and the body was found. The end yard time to body discovery interval is, after, the time window for the murder, so the news would be reporting that - there's a 20 minute window when the murder could have taken place.
The first image shows the representation when I place the start of Lave's 5 minute interval at 20 minutes to 1 (the version I tend not to think likely, but as that's only my opinion and I could be wrong, I thought it best to show it):
Oh, and the minute marks would represent a 12 minute interval (divide the hour into 5 steps, and that's 12 minutes per step).
I've tried to stack the "clock plots", so "higher" means more agreement.
If I place the end of the 5 minute yard time to be at 12:40, then we get this version, and it shows a large commonality between 12:35 and 12:40 (common to all sources, except the Times, which doesn't mention the duration, just the 20 minutes before point in time):
The duration between 12:30 and 12:35 is common to 3 sources (possible more, as the two that say 5 minutes do say 5 or more minutes, but I've not quantified the "or more" bit, obviously if I make "or more" to mean up to 5 more minutes, then 12:30-12:40 would be common to all.
The times that have the least commonality from the sources are from 1:40 to 1:00 (1:45-1:00 in the first plot), which comes from the Evening Standard's interval of 12:30 to 1:00. I think it becomes quite clear that report seems to stand out as being quite different from the others, while the others cluster reasonably well (even the first version has them clustering pretty well).
I've got some ideas of how summarizing witness statements like this might be used to try and work on a time line sequence that also represents the error we have in the information (these plots visually show the variation between the news reports and how they describe Lave's time in the yard).
Anyway, the colours aren't great, and there are some cosmetic things I want to work on, but it's a working version.
Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes
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