Originally posted by JeffHamm
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Yes, I can see the link.
Thanks for taking the time to find and post this by the way, because it does add something to the discussion.
What I have been able to understand is the following:
1) This research was published in the Science Advances Journal, which I believe is an American publication concerned with research in any area of science.
2) It is a peer reviewed publication requiring at least two reviews.
One caution here is that this is a multidisciplinary journal as opposed to one specifically associated with anatomy or the field of estimating time of death. When they say 'peer reviewed' it is not clear by whom, i.e. is it someone well versed in the ins and outs of estimating time of death, given it is a multidisciplinary journal it is not necessarily the case. What it does state on the Science Advances Journal website, is that bringing in expertise in the field that is being reviewed is at the editors discretion. Given it's your link/post/article, I'm hoping you can clarify whether or not this has been peer reviewed by someone with expertise in the field of estimating time of death.
3) The pertinent part of the article in your link is this: existing methods can only give a window of several hours. This is what we're discussing in this thread. Based on your link/article, it appears that the people have who have written the article are making that statement. It is not a direct quote from the researchers (whereas they do quote the researchers in other parts of the article).
4) Following on from the above point, it is not clear what exactly was published in the Science Advances Journal. Did they simply publish the research or did the Science Advances Journal claim that existing methods can only give a window of several hours also. In the event it's the former, then we do not have a peer reviewed assessment of the claim existing methods can only give a window of several hour. Given it's your link/article to support an argument, I'm hoping you can tell me who exactly is claiming existing methods can only give a window of several hour (as far as I can tell it's the person who has written the article and I don't know who that is) and whether or not the Science Advances Journal repeated this claim when they published the research. Clearly it is an important point because it tells us whether or not that claim was peer reviewed, although it won't tell us whether or not peer reviewed by people with expertise in the field of estimating time of death (because according to the Science Advances Journal, drafting such expertise is at the editor's discretion).
What may be of interest, however, is that Dr Phillips agreed with the person making the claim existing methods can only give a window of several hours when assessing Mary's body, between 2am and 8am, but not when assessing Annie's body.
The article you have posted is useful because it begins to lead the discussion where it should go, i.e. looking at the science behind estimating TOD. Having said that, it in no way constitutes 'proof' that existing methods can only give a window of several hours, see the reasons I have mentioned in this post.
Feel free to add some meat to the bones in terms of the questions I've asked in this post.
As I said though Jeff, thanks for posting this. It's definitely piqued my curiosity and I'm going to start having a look at this to try and determine just how unreliable estimating TOD is and how that is impacted by the time interval from death to assessing the body. When I say determine, quite frankly I don't have the scientific apparatus sat around in my loft to be able to do this myself, but there must be studies out there and they may offer a consensus among experts in that field. I do quite a bit of photography in my spare time and it's the first day we've had in ages where there is sun and little wind combined and so I'll be out all day and not looking for studies. At some point over the weekend I'm going to start looking and it certainly deserves its own thread.
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