I hope someone is paying you to spend so much time posting such dishonest drivel. Dr. Barger himself noted that there was a 99% probability that the locational matches were not the result of chance. The HSCA report also noted this. I've quoted their statements on this fact.
What Dr. Barger has failed to do is to state:
• Unequivocally state that all combinations of the seven-1963 impulses were compared with the 432-1978 impulses.
We need this statement, at a minimum to conclude that there was an amazing, 1-in-120, correlation between the entire data set and the position of the motorcycle, appearing to make its way up Houston and Elm in a consistent manner.
Question 1:
After 40 years, has Dr. Barger ever made such a clear statement?Yes, we know there is good correlation with the consistent progress of the motorcycle hypothesis with the data the BBN did check in 1978. But this is meaningless unless we know that all possible correlations were checked.
If BBN only checked for correlations:
For the first shot, between microphones 2 ( 5 ) and 2 ( 6 ),
for the second shot, between microphones 2 ( 6 ) and 3 ( 5 ),
for the third shot, between microphones 2 ( 11 ) and 2 ( 11 ),
for the fourth shot, between microphones 3 ( 4 ) and 3 ( 8 ),
for the fifth shot, between microphones 3 ( 5 ) and 3 ( 8 ),
then there is no amazing 1-in-120 coincidence. The correlations they do find would naturally match the scenario of a motorcycle moving forward.
For all we know, if a complete search was done, we might find:
• correlations for the first, second and third shots in the range of microphones 3 ( 9 ) through 3 ( 12 ),
• correlations for the fourth and fifth shots in the range of microphones 1 ( 1 ) through 2 ( 4 )
and we would find what we found with the “location of the shooter” and the “location of the target” correlations, random correlations for the “location of the motorcycle”.
So, again, ideally, I would like from Dr. Barger:
• Unequivocally state that all combinations of the seven-1963 impulses were compared with the 432-1978 impulses.
• State the time needed to check and calculate one combination of 1963 impulse with a 1978 impulse.
• The number of men assigned to this task.
• The number of man hours that were used in this task alone.
• A statement that these were “blind” comparisons. That the checker did not know which of the seven impulses he was checking nor which microphone he was checking for. This would eliminate the expectations of a checker failing to find a correlation for the fourth shot at microphone 1 ( 7 ) because he thought any such correlation would be impossible.
But after 40 years, we have had no such statement from Dr. Barger.
One last time, regarding the match between the data being consistent with a motorcycle making progress down Houston and Elm:
• if a complete, thorough, unbiased, comparison of all seven-1963 impulses were each compared to all 432-1978 impulses, then can we conclude that the odds were 1-in-120. Well, actually somewhat less than that because some of the found correlations were out of order.
• But if this was not done than the true odds may be more like 1-in-1, depending on how incomplete the search was. There is no dispute that WA overestimated the probability that chance caused the correlations produced by the sonar analysis of the grassy knoll shot. The NRC panel realized this error was caused by assigning errant numbers for some of the values used in the calculation. Dr. Thomas has documented this fact in several writings, including his book, and I quoted a segment on this issue from his book a few replies ago.
And Dr. Thomas has explained in great detail why the actual odds against the chance explanation are 100,000 to 1. You have not said one word that directly deals with Dr. Thomas's detailed explanation, which includes all the math that produce those odds. As usual, you have done nothing but snipe at the point with dishonest evasions. Perhaps it is time to ask you to put up or shut up. If you have any evidence that Dr. Thomas's calculation is wrong, let's see it. Your failure to do so will be a clear admission that you can't refute it.
Dr. Thomas has explained this, but you can find no expert who agrees with him. Only an expert who agreed to proof-read his work and who has become a good friend of his. But no statement from any expert who says Dr. Thomas is correct about this 1-in-100,000 estimate of the chance.
And I will again note that you keep ignoring the fact that WA themselves noted that their probability of chance calculation was "highly conservative" and that the actual probability was "considerably less."
As to be expected if they had actually made “highly optimistic” estimates due to being subconsciously influenced by “p-hacking”. Which just happened to cause them to arrive at a p-value of 95%. The ultimate goal of those under the influence of p-hacking.
HUH??? This silly lie again? I've already debunked this nonsense. As I have documented for you, the BBN scientists screened all of the impulse patterns on the tape for N-wave-like characteristics. They did not have the test-firing data yet, but, being acoustical scientists who had dealt with gunfire cases before, they understood the general characteristics of N-waves and how they would appear on a oscillogram/spectrogram. This was one of the five screening tests, and only the six impulse patterns between 136.20 and 146.30 passed this test.
You and Dr. Barger have something in common. You both fail to see that there are not six impulses but seven. They are all listed on BBN’s Exhibit F-367. I will list them again. They are:
https://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/russ/infojfk/jfk2/f367.htm136.20
137.70
139.27
140.32
145.15
145.61
146.30
They thought all seven were possible candidates as gunshots. They did comparisons of each with some of the 432-1978 recordings. They rejected 136.20 and 146.30 as gunshots because they could not find any correlation stronger than 0.5.
Nowhere do they state, from their “N-wave” characteristics or for any other property, that they were gunshots. It was only through the similarity of 4 of the waveforms with some of the 1978 test impulses that they concluded that these 4 were gunshots.
Again, you seem to be the only one who thinks, that from the 1963 impulses alone, one can tell that they could only be formed by gunshots.Question:
Where is the statement form the BBN that N-waves can only be formed by gunfire?
Question:
If these N-waves can only be formed by gunfire, why did they reject the impulses at 136.20 and 146.30, as shown on BBN Exhibit F-367? From reading their statements I glean that the BBN settled on these seven impulses because:
• The number of impulses match the very upper limit to the number of shots that may have been fired.
• The seven impulses occurred over a span of 10.1 seconds, and they made it clear they were looking for a span of at least 5 seconds.
These is nothing form their statements, that from these seven impulses alone, that they could tell that these were formed by gunshots. You seem to be the only one who makes this claim.
Eventually, they only concluded that they were gunshots, because of their similarity to either a test shot from the TSBD or a test shot from the Grassy Knoll. The only problem is, and it is a whopper, is that 3 of the shots had similarities with both a test shot from the TSBD and a test shot from the Grassy knoll. Indicating that they were finding at least some false correlations, what they called “false alarms”. Which casts doubt on all their correlations. I’m not lying. This is what their own data, in BBN Exhibit F-367 shows. Dr. Barger seems to have turned a blind eye to what his own data was trying to tell him.