An official website of the United States government.

This is not the current EPA website. To navigate to the current EPA website, please go to www.epa.gov. This website is historical material reflecting the EPA website as it existed on January 19, 2021. This website is no longer updated and links to external websites and some internal pages may not work. More information »

CADDIS Volume 1

Consistency of Evidence

Concept

Consistency of Evidence: Confidence in the argument for or against a candidate cause is increased when many types of evidence consistently support or weaken it.

The table below shows a candidate cause is strongly supported if all available types of evidence are consistently supportive. It is greatly weakened if all available types of evidence are consistently weakening. It is weakened if some types of evidence support and others weaken the candidate cause.

  Candidate Causes
Types of Evidence NH3 CU TSS
Co-occurrence + - +
Causal pathway + - -
Manipulation + - +
Stressor-Response + - -

Examples

Consider increased water temperature as a candidate cause of reduced abundance of fish. What findings support or weaken the case for increased temperature as the cause, in terms of consistency of evidence?

  • Supporting evidence: Seven types of evidence were available and all support the case for increased temperature as the cause; no evidence weakens the case.
  • Weakening evidence: Four types of evidence support the case for increased temperature, but three types of evidence weakened it.

Top of Page


How Do I Analyze Consistency?

After assembling all the scored types of evidence for a candidate cause, observe if all types of evidence are supporting, weakening, or a mixture of points that support and weaken the case for the candidate cause. Ambiguous evidence (scores of 0) are not included. Based on this assessment, score the body of evidence for that candidate. Keep in mind that is not appropriate to add the plus and minus symbols from the scoring tables to determine consistency.

Example analysis worksheets for consistency of evidence (from the Little Scioto River, OH, USA):

Top of Page


What Evidence Would Support or Weaken the Case for a Candidate Cause, inTerms of Consistency?

Supports

  • All types of evidence support the case for the candidate cause.

Weakens

  • All types of evidence weaken the case for the candidate cause.
  • Some types of evidence support and some weaken the case for the candidate cause, thereby undermining confidence in it as a true cause.

Top of Page


How Do I Score the Consistency of Evidence?

Finding Interpretation Score
All available types of evidence support the case for the candidate cause. This finding convincingly supports the case for the candidate cause. +++
All available types of evidence weaken the case for the candidate cause. This finding convincingly weakens the candidate cause. - - -
All available types of evidence support the case for the candidate cause, but few types are available. This finding somewhat supports the case for the candidate cause, but is not strongly supportive because coincidence and errors may be responsible. +
All available types of evidence weaken the case for the candidate cause, but few types are available. This finding somewhat weakens the case for the candidate cause, but is not strongly weakening because coincidence and errors may be responsible. -
The evidence is ambiguous or inadequate. This finding neither supports nor weakens the case for the candidate cause. 0
Some available types of evidence support and some weaken the case for the candidate cause. This finding somewhat weakens the case for the candidate cause, but is not convincing because a few inconsistencies may be explained. -

Top of Page


Helpful Tips

The influence of consistency increases as more types of evidence are used.

Top of Page