by Richard » 29 Jan 2018 07:43
I find it interesting that the replies focus on similarities in procedures (both require searching, interviews, interrogations, evidence collection and preservation and various methods of investigation, discussing/sharing ideas, dissemination, patience to sift through all the information, looking at the data from different perspectives, decipher (through rigorous techniques and strategies) what data one should be collecting, systematic data collection and analysis, think about appropriate approaches and methods to analyze the data).
Most of these focus on the data collection and analysis stages, but I found the point about the need to discuss/share ideas useful. Is this the purpose of PhD supervisions?
One further similarity involves how to make conclusions. In detective or legal novels, we hear about proof beyond a reasonable level of doubt. In research, we find quotes such as "By convention (i.e. simply by common agreement among researchers), a reasonable level of doubt about the truth of a theory is one chance in twenty (5%, or a probability of 0.05)". So, in a trial, is a jury in effect testing a hypothesis at a certain level of significance?
The areas which are still missing from this discussion seem to me to be the differences, and whether research and forensic investigations have different philosophies. For instance, detectives usually believe that there is a single correct answer (i.e. the culprit who committed the crime); do researchers hold this belief?