I haven't misread Sturdivan's testimony at all. You have. In claiming that Sturdivan was saying that the neuromuscular reaction began about 1000 milliseconds after bullet impact, you were obviously working under the false assumption that he was using "decerebrate rigidity" synonymously with "neuromuscular reaction".
You don't even know what you're talking about. "Deceberate rigidity" is the same thing as "deceberate reaction." They are two terms for the same action, and Sturdivan used both as synonyms for "neuromuscular reaction." You can Google them and learn this for yourself.
Thomas' area of expertise is the study of insects.
Yes, his main field of expertise is entomology, but his research on forensic/ballistics/acoustics issues has been published in peer-reviewed journals, including
Science and Justice. He has also had over 100 articles published in scientific journals.
Sturdivan's expertise is wound ballistics. Sturdivan has also had his work published in peer-reviewed forensics journals. One such being "BALLISTICS FOR THE NEUROSURGEON" published in Neurosurgery, which is the official journal of the Congress of Neurological Surgeons. His work has also been published in The Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery, Journal of Surgical Research, and Computers in Biology and Medicine, to name a few others. Thomas should stick to what he knows and quit embarassing himself by foraying into areas beyond his ken.
Wow, really? So that's your answer: Dr. Thomas doesn't know what he's talking about regarding human anatomy and neuro reactions? Wow, uh-huh. Never mind that neuroscientists Joe Riley and Robert Zacharko have likewise said that the neuromuscular-reaction theory is nonsense, right? And never mind that you guys can't cite a single neuroscientist who is willing to say that JFK's backward movement could have been caused by a neurospasm, right?
I'm guessing that you probably did not even understand half of what Dr. Thomas said, but you just know that you can't accept his observations and arguments because they don't agree with your neuromuscular-reaction fantasy.