Science & Justice
Volume 48, Issue 1 , Pages 2-7, March 2008

Employing components-of-variance to evaluate forensic breath test instruments

Washington State Patrol, 811 East Roanoke, Seattle, WA 98102, United States

Received 21 April 2006; accepted 18 January 2007. published online 14 June 2007.

Abstract 

The evaluation of breath alcohol instruments for forensic suitability generally includes the assessment of accuracy, precision, linearity, blood/breath comparisons, etc. Although relevant and important, these methods fail to evaluate other important analytical and biological components related to measurement variability. An experimental design comparing different instruments measuring replicate breath samples from several subjects is presented here. Three volunteers provided n=10 breath samples into each of six different instruments within an 18 minute time period. Two-way analysis of variance was employed which quantified the between-instrument effect and the subject/instrument interaction. Variance contributions were also determined for the analytical and biological components. Significant between-instrument and subject/instrument interaction were observed. The biological component of total variance ranged from 56% to 98% among all subject instrument combinations. Such a design can help quantify the influence of and optimize breath sampling parameters that will reduce total measurement variability and enhance overall forensic confidence.

Keywords: Breath alcohol, Components-of-variance, Analysis-of-variance, Measurement variability

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PII: S1355-0306(07)00023-8

doi:10.1016/j.scijus.2007.01.001

Science & Justice
Volume 48, Issue 1 , Pages 2-7, March 2008