Practice with national-level exam (FACT, FACT Plus, NET, CUET, etc.) mocks, learn from structured notes, and get your doubts solved in one place.
Timed practice tests with instant scoring and per-question explanations.
This hard-level mock tests critical thinking, scenario interpretation, and the ability to identify what is scientifically defensible from what merely sounds plausible. All thirty questions present realistic forensic situations, case scenarios, or nuanced conceptual distinctions that require reasoning rather than recall — the level required for NFSU MSc viva examinations, FACT Plus, and advanced UGC-NET papers. Scenarios include: a fingerprint examiner given case context before ACE-V examination (cognitive bias risk); correctly interpreting a negative trace evidence finding (absence ≠ exclusion); why a bite-mark identification claim is scientifically unsupportable under PCAST 2016; why 'no possibility of error' overstates any forensic conclusion; the product rule's two statistical requirements (HWE + linkage equilibrium); post-mortem alcohol unreliability from putrefactive synthesis and GIT redistribution; confirmation bias when ACE-V verifier knows the first examiner's conclusion; fibre colour exclusion by microspectrophotometry despite polymer class match; why presenting posterior probability to the jury usurps the court's function; allelic drop-out as the primary consideration in single-locus-peak low-template profiles; why an accused's explanation of innocent DNA access is for the court to evaluate; Selvi v. State of Karnataka on testimonial vs non-testimonial compulsion; Section 51(2) BNSS female accused examination; post-mortem redistribution interpretation (cardiac vs femoral alprazolam); the corpus delicti doctrine and false confession prevention; ACE-V 'identification' as a qualitative finding not a point count; IGG privacy concerns vs CODIS; which test combination confirms human blood; 'consistent with' in questioned document examination; digital Locard artefacts as unconscious traces; physical developer chemistry for wet documents; the DNA Bill 2019 lapse status; defence vs prosecution expert conflicts; bidirectional Locard submission strategy; analyst DNA contamination response; accused refusal under Section 51 BNSS; forensic entomology minPMI when body was sealed indoors; contradictory findings and the analyst's duty; and the court's ability to convict without or acquit despite forensic evidence. Themes covered: - Cognitive bias, expert overstatement, PCAST 2016 on bite marks - Negative findings, Locard threshold of detection, digital Locard artefacts - DNA: product rule, low-template drop-out, RMP interpretation, IGG privacy, DNA Bill 2019 - Fingerprints: ACE-V 'identification' definition, confirmation bias in verification - Forensic biology: test combination for human blood confirmation, questioned document 'consistent with' - Toxicology: post-mortem alcohol (putrefactive ethanol + redistribution), cardiac vs femoral blood - Indian law: Selvi distinction (testimonial vs physical), Section 51 BNSS, corpus delicti, DNA Bill - Professional ethics: contradictory findings, analyst contamination, bidirectional submission strategy Each question carries a detailed explanation citing PCAST 2016, NAS 2009, Buckleton's Forensic DNA Evidence Interpretation, Saferstein's Criminalistics, Lee and Gaensslen's Advances in Fingerprint Technology, and primary Indian legal sources. Allow 15 minutes.