Anexpert report is a study written by one or moreauthorities that states findings and offersopinions.
In law, expert reports are generated byexpert witnesses offering their opinions on points of controversy in alegal case and are typically sponsored by one side or the other in a litigation in order to support that party's claims. The reports statefacts, discuss details, explain reasoning, and justify the experts' conclusions and opinions.[1]
In medicine, an expert report is a critical assessment of a medical topic, for example, an independent assessment of thecost–benefit ratio of a particularmedical treatment.[2]
As part ofsurvey pretesting, an expert report (using theexpert review method) identifies potential problems that could affect data quality and data collection by evaluating survey questionnaires andsurvey translations.[3][4][5]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^Hirt TC (1999). "Expert reports". In Koeltl JG; Kiernan JS; ABA Section of Litigation (eds.).The Litigation Manual (3rd ed.). American Bar Assn. pp. 477–87.ISBN 1-57073-639-1.
- ^Marks P (2007). "Clinical research education and training for pharmaceutical staff". In Edwards LD, Fletcher AJ (eds.).Principles and Practice of Pharmaceutical Medicine (2nd ed.). Wiley. pp. 25–40.ISBN 978-0-470-09313-9.
- ^Yan, T.; Kreuter, F.; Tourangeau, R (December 2012). "Evaluating Survey Questions: A Comparison of Methods".Journal of Official Statistics.28 (4):503–529.
- ^Sha, Mandy (March 2012)."Translation Review and Cognitive Testing of ACS Language Assistance Guides in Multiple Languages".United States Census Bureau. Retrieved2024-01-08.
- ^Pan, Yuling; Sha, Mandy (2019-07-09).The Sociolinguistics of Survey Translation. London:Routledge. pp. 118–124.doi:10.4324/9780429294914.ISBN 978-0-429-29491-4.S2CID 198632812.