logging in or signing up Requirement of forensic animation drneelesh Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINT lite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 201 Category: Others/ Misc License: All Rights Reserved Like it (0) Dislike it (0) Added: June 19, 2009 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 0 Presentation Description Answers all your Questions about use of animations in law. admissibility, requirements, uses, history etc. Comments Posting comment... Premium member Presentation Transcript Slide 1: Requirement of forensic animation Is it required ? Is it allowed ? Does it Work ? Where can it be done ? And all such questions answered.. Slide 2: The law review literature is full of clichés such as “A picture is worth a thousand words” (Kelly, 1995;Powell,1996;Sherman,1992;Turbak,1994) “Seeing is believing” (Bennett,Leibman,&Fetter,1999;Borelli,1996;Plowman,1996) Slide 3: - Client Conferences - Medical Expert Conferences - Expert Depositions - Mock Trials and Focus Groups - Trial The use of the technology had already been well-established in US litigation by that time. It has been reported that the first instance of computer-generated graphics being used in a British court took place at Oxford Crown Court in September 1994: R v Wharton (Horten 1994, p 1289) - Settlement Conferences In use since two decades Slide 4: By 1992, it was estimated that computer- generated displays had been used in 858 cases in the US where litigation took place between major companies. In these, all except 15 settled out of court and in all the 15 cases which went to trial, the side using computer-generated displays was successful.- (McKeone 1992, p 6). When Used in the Criminal Legal Process Forensic Science Shows a Bias in Favor of the Prosecution. - Science and Justice, Volume 41, Number 4, pp 271 – 277, 2001 Slide 5: The term “animation” is usually used to refer to dynamic illustrations, like those that might be used as a teaching aid. The term “scientific animation” is reserved for animations in which the motion is governed by scientific principles rather than an artist’s creative vision. They include empirical data from the body or the crime scene. Scientific animations can, accordingly, be thought of as a form of three-dimensional data visualization The third form of animation, “simulation” is a scientific animation used specifically for prediction purposes. Animation / Scientific Animation / Simulation 1 2 3 Slide 6: * When the opinions of an expert witness are too difficult to visualize * When an event you are trying to describe simply can't be illustrated by other means * When alternative theories for how certain events happened need to be effectively communicated * When technical issues are simply too complex for the layperson to understand through verbal explanation * When certain events are too dangerous or impossible to recreate * When things like time, motion or speed need to simplified or slowed in order to make sense When Animation for Litigation Works Slide 7: Evidence is meaningless if it cannot be transmitted effectively to the fact finder. Demonstrative Evidence : Demonstrative Evidence evidence other than a person's oral testimony but which may help to explain that testimony "aids" to understanding and retention of presented evidence assuming that the proper foundation can be laid, computer simulations may be allowed into evidence as independent substantive evidence offered as an illustration of an expert’s testimony rather than as a recreation of the event Pennsylvania, 2008. : Pennsylvania, 2008. The Western District of Pennsylvania held that the probative value of a computer animation outweighed any prejudicial effect of the evidence. The Court emphasized that the animation was not offered as a reconstruction of the accident but as an aid to help the jury visualize the testimony proffered by the witnesses. Proper foundation had been provided as to how the computer images were generated, and they accurately reflected the actual vehicles involved. - Altman v. Bobcat Co., 2008 WL 2779301, at * (W.D. Pa. July 14, 2008). http://www.ca3.uscourts.gov/judconf2009/materials/trial%20courts%20-% 20suggested%20reading.pdf Slide 10: UK Guidelines for use of forensic animations- Any animation must support and corroborate existing evidence. • The supportive evidence will be used in conjunction with the animation. • There will be documentary evidence detailing the animation methodology. • Any distinction between ‘animation’ and ‘simulation’ will be defined and indicated Slide 11: Usually, the testimony of the expert that their data was used in the production of the animation, and that the animation accurately illustrates their opinion Of what happened, is sufficient to satisfy the foundational and authenticity requirements for a forensic animation. http://www.expertlaw.com/library/animation/admission_forensic_animation2.html http://www.cliffordlaw.com/news/attorneys-articles/the-use-of-video-at-trial-a-potentially-powerful-tool Admissibility in courts Slide 12: Uses - Slide 13: Uses - Slide 14: - Medical Animation Library - 2D/3D Medical & Scientific Illustrations 2D/3D Medical & Scientific Animations Forensic animations - Flash based Interactive Applications - Websites & Health Portals To look at a few samples, Click Here info@markivmedical.com Slide 16: listen‘ is t r y ^ d's second creative commons album release. - Involving the work of 20 musicians located around the world, this album represents a global collective effort. - a blending of multiple styles, with a specific focus placed upon classical piano, 'listen' is a mature work of melodic electronica.. 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Requirement of forensic animation drneelesh Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINT lite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 201 Category: Others/ Misc License: All Rights Reserved Like it (0) Dislike it (0) Added: June 19, 2009 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 0 Presentation Description Answers all your Questions about use of animations in law. admissibility, requirements, uses, history etc. Comments Posting comment... Premium member Presentation Transcript Slide 1: Requirement of forensic animation Is it required ? Is it allowed ? Does it Work ? Where can it be done ? And all such questions answered.. Slide 2: The law review literature is full of clichés such as “A picture is worth a thousand words” (Kelly, 1995;Powell,1996;Sherman,1992;Turbak,1994) “Seeing is believing” (Bennett,Leibman,&Fetter,1999;Borelli,1996;Plowman,1996) Slide 3: - Client Conferences - Medical Expert Conferences - Expert Depositions - Mock Trials and Focus Groups - Trial The use of the technology had already been well-established in US litigation by that time. It has been reported that the first instance of computer-generated graphics being used in a British court took place at Oxford Crown Court in September 1994: R v Wharton (Horten 1994, p 1289) - Settlement Conferences In use since two decades Slide 4: By 1992, it was estimated that computer- generated displays had been used in 858 cases in the US where litigation took place between major companies. In these, all except 15 settled out of court and in all the 15 cases which went to trial, the side using computer-generated displays was successful.- (McKeone 1992, p 6). When Used in the Criminal Legal Process Forensic Science Shows a Bias in Favor of the Prosecution. - Science and Justice, Volume 41, Number 4, pp 271 – 277, 2001 Slide 5: The term “animation” is usually used to refer to dynamic illustrations, like those that might be used as a teaching aid. The term “scientific animation” is reserved for animations in which the motion is governed by scientific principles rather than an artist’s creative vision. They include empirical data from the body or the crime scene. Scientific animations can, accordingly, be thought of as a form of three-dimensional data visualization The third form of animation, “simulation” is a scientific animation used specifically for prediction purposes. Animation / Scientific Animation / Simulation 1 2 3 Slide 6: * When the opinions of an expert witness are too difficult to visualize * When an event you are trying to describe simply can't be illustrated by other means * When alternative theories for how certain events happened need to be effectively communicated * When technical issues are simply too complex for the layperson to understand through verbal explanation * When certain events are too dangerous or impossible to recreate * When things like time, motion or speed need to simplified or slowed in order to make sense When Animation for Litigation Works Slide 7: Evidence is meaningless if it cannot be transmitted effectively to the fact finder. Demonstrative Evidence : Demonstrative Evidence evidence other than a person's oral testimony but which may help to explain that testimony "aids" to understanding and retention of presented evidence assuming that the proper foundation can be laid, computer simulations may be allowed into evidence as independent substantive evidence offered as an illustration of an expert’s testimony rather than as a recreation of the event Pennsylvania, 2008. : Pennsylvania, 2008. The Western District of Pennsylvania held that the probative value of a computer animation outweighed any prejudicial effect of the evidence. The Court emphasized that the animation was not offered as a reconstruction of the accident but as an aid to help the jury visualize the testimony proffered by the witnesses. Proper foundation had been provided as to how the computer images were generated, and they accurately reflected the actual vehicles involved. - Altman v. Bobcat Co., 2008 WL 2779301, at * (W.D. Pa. July 14, 2008). http://www.ca3.uscourts.gov/judconf2009/materials/trial%20courts%20-% 20suggested%20reading.pdf Slide 10: UK Guidelines for use of forensic animations- Any animation must support and corroborate existing evidence. • The supportive evidence will be used in conjunction with the animation. • There will be documentary evidence detailing the animation methodology. • Any distinction between ‘animation’ and ‘simulation’ will be defined and indicated Slide 11: Usually, the testimony of the expert that their data was used in the production of the animation, and that the animation accurately illustrates their opinion Of what happened, is sufficient to satisfy the foundational and authenticity requirements for a forensic animation. http://www.expertlaw.com/library/animation/admission_forensic_animation2.html http://www.cliffordlaw.com/news/attorneys-articles/the-use-of-video-at-trial-a-potentially-powerful-tool Admissibility in courts Slide 12: Uses - Slide 13: Uses - Slide 14: - Medical Animation Library - 2D/3D Medical & Scientific Illustrations 2D/3D Medical & Scientific Animations Forensic animations - Flash based Interactive Applications - Websites & Health Portals To look at a few samples, Click Here info@markivmedical.com Slide 16: listen‘ is t r y ^ d's second creative commons album release. - Involving the work of 20 musicians located around the world, this album represents a global collective effort. - a blending of multiple styles, with a specific focus placed upon classical piano, 'listen' is a mature work of melodic electronica.. Music by- Slide 17: This presentation created by-