Five of those six impulse patterns passed the matched filtering test.
Look again at my initial post, which contains a copy of Dr. Barger’s Exhibit F-367, which he presented on September 11, 1978 to the HSCA:
It contains the following impulses at the following times:
Impulse # 1 – 136.20 – 0.5 - Rejected
Impulse # 2 – 137.70 – 0.8
Impulse # 3 – 139.27 – 0.8
Impulse # 4 – 140.32 – 0.6 - Rejected
Impulse # 5 – 145.15 – 0.8
Impulse # 6 – 136.20 – 0.8
Impulse # 7 – 136.20 - 0.5 - Rejected
Question 1:
You see 7 impulses, Correct? Question 2:
The four impulses that were judged good all had a correlation coefficient of 0.8, correct? Question 3:
So, this means that not 5 out of 6, but 4 out of 7 passed the BBN tests as real gunshots in 1978, correct? Question 4:
The three rejected impulses had an inferior correlation coefficient of 0.5 or 0.6, correct? Question 5:
One of the rejected impulses, at 140.32, corresponding to z216 (BBN’s estimate) and z224 (Dr. Thomas’s estimate), had a correlation coefficient of 0.6. Inferior to all the other accepted shots, correct? So, it appears to me, that this “z224” was not rejected because of pressure from Robert Blakey but because it did not correlate well enough with any of the 1978 shooting tests.
Question 6:
Are you saying that Robert Blakey put pressure on Dr. Barger, and as a result Dr. Barger not only removed the shot at 140.32 as a possible shot (at either z216 or z224) but forged his data, to show a correlation coefficient of 0.6 instead of 0.8? Question 7:
On what basis, do you claim this shot at 140.32 has just as good support from the evidence as the four impulse patterns the BBN accepted as shots back in 1978? Oh. . . . Okay. . . . So all the BBN scientists were involved in a conspiracy to lie about the 4-second impulse. LOL. Got it.
Well, you seem to think that all the BBN scientists were involved in a conspiracy to suppress the evidence for a shot at 140.32. Apparently even forging some of there data, to make it appear that the best correlation for this time was only 0.6.
But, no, I don’t support a BBN conspiracy. Only a reluctance to investigate the 4-second impulse sequence, which could undermine their conclusions about the 10-second impulse sequence.
Here's a question to chew on: The NRC panel had unlimited funding and could have easily tested that 4-second sequence with all the tests that the HSCA experts applied to the six gunshot sequence patterns that passed the screening tests. Why didn't they do that? Because they knew it would be a waste of time?
I don’t think they did have unlimited funding. Or at least it was not made available to the BBN. And more importantly, not unlimited time. The BBN had only 10 days between the August 20, 1978 firing tests at Dealey Plaza to August 30, 1978, to study the data and to make their initial report to the HSCA.
First of all, a correlation of 0.8 is very high, very close to perfect, as Barger explained. 0.5 was the minimum threshold, although Dr. Barger mostly limited his discussion to correlations that were at least 0.6, for reasons that Barger also explained. Dr. Barger said that a correlation of 0.75 meant that two impulse patterns matched "quite admirably." So 0.8 is a very solid correlation.
A correlation coefficient of 0.8 is very high, is it? Well let’s look at a couple of comparisons that met this “very high” rating, from BBN’s Exhibit F-367:
Test | Beginning Time of | Zap. | Zap. | Microphone Array | Rifle | Target | Correlation | Strong | Fluke |
ID | First impulse on | Frame | Frame | and | Location | Location | Coefficient** |
| Tape Segments (sec) | BBN | Thomas | (Channel Numbers) |
|
B | 137.70 | 168 | 176 | 2 ( 5 ) | TSBD* | 1 | 0.8 | Strong |
D | 137.70 | 168 | 176 | 2 ( 6 ) | TSBD | 3 | 0.8 | Strong | Fluke |
|
* Indicates Muzzle Withdrawn 2 ft from Plane of Window
* Correlation coefficient = number of experienced Matches with Impulses divided by the square root of the number of echoes X Number of impulses is Less than or equal to 1.0
Now, each shot, depending on:
• Where it is fired from.
• Where the microphone is that records this shot.
• Where the rifle was aimed at
One gets a unique “fingerprint” for that shot. No other shot should match that fingerprint. Change any one of the three factors and one will get a different waveform.
So, at 137.70, there was a shot from the TSBD, at both Target 1 and Target 3. So, which is it? Was it aimed at Target 1 or Target 3? It was impossible for a bullet to hit near both targets.
So, it seems that, at best, one of these correlations if good. And the other is bogus. So, it is quite evident that a correlation coefficient of 0.8 is not good enough to get a valid result we can be confident in. In truth, some correlations of 0.8 correspond to events that never took place. Perhaps all of them.